The Hollywood Reporter's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 12,931 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: 6,624 out of 12931
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Mixed: 5,139 out of 12931
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Negative: 1,168 out of 12931
12931
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
While several of the dance sequences admittedly pack a visual pop, the added dimension does the hokey scripting and some of the acting no favors by amplifying their already noticeable shortcomings.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
Nimbly blending comedy and action -- with an affectionate slo-mo nod to John Woo -- McKay does his best work to date here.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Critic Score
Aside from the sweltering Egyptian climate, little heat or excitement is generated by the film or its attractive stars.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Kirk Honeycutt
Reiner again demonstrates compassion and insight into young people's battles to acquire self-knowledge, but in his new film, too many clearly fictional characters and contrived situations bog down his story.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
Decidedly stimulating in its own right, at least in the early going.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Taut, superbly executed and consistently engrossing, The Disappearance of Alice Creed marks an auspicious feature debut for writer-director J Blakeson.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Kirk Honeycutt
"Dream" brings together so much history, sheer adventure and terrifying moments.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Kirk Honeycutt
Joel Schumacher's Twelve, the latest expose of self-indulgence among privileged teens, is sleek, giddy fun.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Deborah Young
The emotional traumas of young Israeli soldiers drafted into the war with Lebanon in the 1980s are recounted through the eyes of a tank crew in this wrenching concentration of raw emotion directed by Samuel Maoz.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Artistically uneven, emotionally strained but at times sullenly poetic depiction of a sexually confused love pentangle.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
John DeFore
Though Carell and Rudd are both saddled with characters that just aren't as interesting as many they've played in the past, the movie benefits from having drawn many gifted comedians to supporting roles.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Kirk Honeycutt
The film doesn't just fail, it actually gets sillier by the minute.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Michael Rechtshaffen
The film is at its most potent delineating Hefner's role in the American civil rights movement, going beyond the pages of his magazine.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Kirk Honeycutt
This isn't so much that the story and characters are weak -- though they very much are -- but that animatronics and computer animation so anthropomorphize these critters that they bear more resemblance to cartoons than actual flesh-and-fur animals.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Kirk Honeycutt
This odd collection of oddballs doesn't quite play out as a satisfying movie.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Filmmaker Leon Gast ("When We Were Kings") paints an entertaining portrait of the still-working 79-year-old photographer.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Ultimately, there's not enough material to sustain a feature-length film, and the sloppy editing, cheesy re-enactments and cheap graphics don't exactly make for compelling viewing.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Kirk Honeycutt
Salt moves ever forward -- pushing, pushing, pushing its heroine to greater feats every minute. It doesn't stop for martinis, either shaken or stirred, or any other detours. The movie is lean and muscular, looking for action even in situations where a little sleight of hand might have done the trick.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
While its cast delivers uniformly breezy performances, most everything else about Ramona's move to the multiplex feels unremarkable.- The Hollywood Reporter
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John DeFore
Convincingly argued and extremely polished, it has theatrical potential for auds whose reservoir of worry about humanity's future hasn't already run dry.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Stephen Farber
While the film is too convoluted to stir boxoffice excitement, it offers some rewards for sophisticated moviegoers- The Hollywood Reporter
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Deborah Young
A heady mix of deadpan humor that boldly uses such topics as pedophilia, race and terrorism to plead the need for forgiveness at a personal and national level.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Frank Scheck
Its awkward title notwithstanding, Mugabe and the White African offers the sort of narrative drama rarely found in documentaries.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Frank Scheck
Spoken Word, which centers on the tense reunion between a recovering addict poet and his dying father, features more cliches than it can comfortably handle and is not helped by its grindingly slow pacing.- The Hollywood Reporter
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John DeFore
A thoroughly engaging film about an inimitable New York painter.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Kirk Honeycutt
In a summer of remakes, reboots and sequels comes Inception, easily the most original movie idea in ages.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Ray Bennett
By keeping his (Daly) focus on the two remarkable youngsters without an ounce of sentimentality he succeeds in making something true and satisfying.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Critic Score
One is hard-pressed to imagine who the audience might be for this actually quite mesmerizing film. Its violence is way too intense for the art film crowd, and its glacial pacing and fascination with brooding on nothing will surely alienate those who've come for the blood and guts.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Kirk Honeycutt
"Apprentice" lurches from one been-there-done-that sequence to another.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by