The Hollywood Reporter's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
For 12,922 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 51% higher than the average critic
  • 4% same as the average critic
  • 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: 100 The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
Lowest review score: 0 Dirty Love
Score distribution:
12922 movie reviews
  1. Informative if selective documentary will eventually find its natural home on the History Channel.
  2. Spans four decades of a troubled family with enough gentle pathos and sly humor to compensate for a less than original storyline.
  3. The spotlight illuminates a well-chosen quintet of subjects, all wholesomely passionate practitioners of a readily dissed form of entertainment and each at a different point in their career.
  4. A smart psychological thriller with the one fatal flaw that Slavic women in Italian television and cinema must be dark, tormented characters who hardly ever smile. In a criminal caper with a twist, this actually works against the story.
    • 72 Metascore
    • 70 Critic Score
    Haroun is uninterested in big war scenes and is best at evoking the little details of life.
  5. One of the finest costume dramas in a long while.
  6. While the men are Danish, there is a universality to their story and a vitality in the filmmaking that should see the documentary in demand around the world.
  7. The supporting players are either nondescript or overact to the point of exhaustion.
  8. The central battle between fearsomely independent corporate mavericks and hostile big government has been updated in a half-baked, unconvincing way that's exacerbated by button-pushing TV-style direction, threadbare production values and blah performances except for that of Taylor Schilling in the central role.
  9. Rio
    Voice work across the board is top-notch, with the Black Eyed Peas' will.i.am and Jamie Foxx adding sass to their smooth-talking bird buddies, and comic George Lopez solid as a party-loving toucan named Rafael.
  10. There is little worse in the movie world than a spoof that falls flat on its over-costumed butt, but that's what you get with Your Highness.
  11. In the end, it isn't so much that the New Arthur isn't the Old Arthur. Rather it's the anti-Arthur.
  12. The effectively deglamorized Cattrall is terrific, investing her portrayal with a complex mixture of vulnerability, toughness and still-powerful sexuality.
  13. A realistic slice of pioneer life that offers a disquieting alternative vision of America's most mythic location.
  14. While Malcolm Venville's Henry's Crime is billed as a comedy it's more funny odd than funny ha-ha.
  15. Sporadically funny though less effective at selling its melancholy undercurrents.
  16. A portrait of the short-lived artist that will move fans while letting the uninitiated witness enough onstage highlights to leave them wanting more.
  17. Blank City may not be groundbreaking, but it's vibrant and well researched.
  18. A documentary about autism that's nearly perfect in doing what an advocacy documentary should do: show rather than tell, entertain rather than preach.
  19. Hop
    Hop delivers plenty of wit, verve and surreal mayhem to entice even the post-adolescent crowd into this jolly (and strangely Christmas-like) Easter egg hunt.
  20. For all its aesthetic deficiencies and self-promotional aspects, it at least provides a valuable and important message.
  21. A true story of courage, determination and guts that deserves a more exciting approach.
  22. The overall enterprise, for all its intrigue and visceral impact, feels overly thought out, affected and forced in its stylization.
  23. This low-rent, R-rated "Rush Hour"-ish comic caper could have been several notches better with more charismatic leads and some dialogue upgrades but still would have felt like a genre hand-me-down.
  24. While the overall theme is potentially rich, filmmaker Griffin merely bores us.
  25. Never less than gripping.
  26. A giddily over-the-top, super-entertaining goof on the Everyman crimefighter flick written and directed with evident relish by James Gunn.
  27. With a homicidal tire as the main character, the film isn't scary enough to qualify as horror and not nearly as amusing as a black comedy should be.
  28. That the film works to the degree that it does is largely due to the sensitive performances. Bonnaire delivers a beautifully modulated turn.
  29. A well-told tale, and though its compact running time makes it a fine TV fit, its visual poetry is worth a big-screen look.

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