The Hollywood Reporter's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 12,922 reviews, this publication has graded:
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51% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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45% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 62
| Highest review score: | The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers | |
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| Lowest review score: | Dirty Love |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 6,619 out of 12922
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Mixed: 5,136 out of 12922
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Negative: 1,167 out of 12922
12922
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
The Troll Hunter injects inventiveness, folkloric idiosyncrasy and deadpan humor into the overexploited faux-documentary trend. A generous dollop of "Jurassic Park" inspiration doesn't hurt either.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 5, 2011
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Todd McCarthy
Like an old airplane (or spacecraft) jerry-rigged from scrap pieces and made air-worthy again, Super 8 has been patched together with 30-year-old spare parts to provide an enjoyable ride of its own.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 5, 2011
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Kirk Honeycutt
The film wants to put on screen the sense of random play and concentrated games that fill a child's world for a few summers. In this it succeeds, but the film does not welcome others who might still retain memories of those NOT bummer summers.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 3, 2011
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Duane Byrge
It took 42 years for filmmaker Lynn Hershman Leeson to make !Women Art Revolution. The film, about the emerging feminist movement, is comprehensive and vibrant.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 30, 2011
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
Directing from the nonjudgmental script he wrote with Michael Armbruster, Ku's assured, unadorned documentary style allows his leads ample breathing room to inhabit their devastated characters.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 29, 2011
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Kirk Honeycutt
All the movie's playfulness rubs off on the actors. Scenes crackle with life. The chemistry among all the actors is terrific.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 29, 2011
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James Greenberg
The Last Mountain makes a powerful case against the coal mining industry in West Virginia. Films like this are largely preaching to the choir -- opponents are unlikely to go near it. But its importance cannot be underestimated.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 29, 2011
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Todd McCarthy
Supplied with uniformly vapid dialogue, the characters come off like a bunch of twits.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 29, 2011
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Kirk Honeycutt
For anyone with a keen interest in this unique American musical form, Rejoice and Shout is a must-see and see-again.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 29, 2011
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John DeFore
Writer-director Richard Ayoade's feature debut is witty and quirky, with a gripping performance by Paddy Considine.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 29, 2011
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Frank Scheck
This relentlessly quirky tale of a teen-age hermaphrodite displays some creativity on the part of debuting writer/director J.B. Ghuman, Jr. but not enough.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 27, 2011
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Reviewed by
Natasha Senjanovic
The dissected minutiae of this adultery drama unfortunately doesn't add up to a very original or moving whole.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 23, 2011
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Todd McCarthy
It all moves along briskly, with a degree of visual grace and a solid feel for 3D.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 23, 2011
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Michael Rechtshaffen
Manages to deliver more laughs than most of the competition.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 23, 2011
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
While Shearer admittedly makes an impassioned directorial debut, the film plays out like a data-heavy, extended investigative report with an academic emphasis on scientific findings over portraits of human suffering.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 21, 2011
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Todd McCarthy
Brandishing an ambition it's likely no film, including this one, could entirely fulfill, The Tree of Life is nonetheless a singular work, an impressionistic metaphysical inquiry into mankind's place in the grand scheme of things that releases waves of insights amid its narrative imprecisions.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 17, 2011
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Kirk Honeycutt
While Kirkpatrick does a fine job in establishing a gritty inner-city milieu and a collection of more than credible street characters caught up in an endless cycle of crime and violence, his body count reaches the proportions of the worst sort of studio schlock. Going for a shock effect, he instead strains credulity and risks unintended laughs.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 17, 2011
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Frank Scheck
This dour, uninspired, Hispanic-themed variation on the profitable "Step Up" dance movies is unlikely to similarly rouse teens.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 14, 2011
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Frank Scheck
Occasionally borders on hagiography, but it nonetheless provides wonderful insights into the book's social and literary importance as well as its author's personality.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 14, 2011
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Ray Bennett
Captain Jack Sparrow is back in excellent form for his fourth adventure in Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, which is more serious in the hands of a new director, Rob Marshall, and thanks to Penelope Cruz it's also a good deal sexier.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 12, 2011
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Todd McCarthy
Darius Khondji's cinematography evokes to the hilt the gorgeously inviting Paris of so many people's imaginations (while conveniently ignoring the rest), and the film has the concision and snappy pace of Allen's best work.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 12, 2011
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Kirk Honeycutt
How To Live Forever is less about how to delay or defeat death than a film about what gives life meaning.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2011
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John DeFore
Too dark for a very broad audience, it will flummox some viewers drawn by its cast but will strike others with its more-than-prickly approach and standoffish humor.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2011
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Stephen Farber
Chadwick strikes a perfect balance between humor and tragic gravity, and the result is that an unknown story seems certain to stir the hearts of audiences worldwide.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2011
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Kirk Honeycutt
Without Antonio Banderas, The Big Bang would be a whimper of a movie, too awful to watch.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2011
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Frank Scheck
Informative and insightful for films buffs without sacrificing accessibility to the casual fan, "Cameraman" is essential viewing for anyone interested in film history.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2011
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Kirk Honeycutt
The film just doesn't mine enough humor or drama from this situation. Meanwhile most of the developments are wholly predictable.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2011
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Ray Bennett
A short, dour and stodgy creature feature with average 3D effects that draws on so many film influences from westerns, action adventures and sci-fi tales that what fun there is comes from spotting the many sources.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 7, 2011
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Todd McCarthy
For longtime Wiig fans, this uneven, overlong, emotionally involving and discreetly ambitious film will represent a welcome and overdue step up from her popular sketch work on "Saturday Night Live" to something sustained and searching, not to mention pretty funny.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 7, 2011
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