The Hollywood Reporter's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 12,897 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 | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Dirty Love |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 6,604 out of 12897
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Mixed: 5,128 out of 12897
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Negative: 1,165 out of 12897
12897
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Redline is the cinematic equivalent of a sports car ad in Maxim magazine.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
While the duo's crimes were indeed sensational, writer-director Todd Robinson's starry take on the material fails to provide much in the way of a new perspective.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Duane Byrge
Overall, Year of the Dog evinces an appealing sentimentality without being maudlin or only puppy-dog cute.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Frank Scheck
The sort of cheesy thriller that would prove mildly diverting on late-night cable, Slow Burn at least features a terrific cast to enliven its familiar elements.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Kirk Honeycutt
This is a minor film from a master, which is disappointing, but nevertheless it has its charms, most notably in the acting by a cast of stage and screen veterans.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
For connoisseurs of stories of show business near-disasters, "Bells" is compelling viewing.- The Hollywood Reporter
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John DeFore
There's plenty to ensure fresh jolts for viewers who know Hitch's tricks inside out, to say nothing of young moviegoers who don't know Grace Kelly from Thelma Ritter.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Kirk Honeycutt
If you were keeping score, it would be Quentin Tarantino 1, Robert Rodriguez 0.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Richard James Havis
Entertaining and piquant. The film does possess some of the bittersweet qualities that usually mark Hallstrom's films, but it's generally a tougher, more incisive work that ranks as one of his best.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Overlong and overstuffed with characters and situations, Ping Pong doesn't really succeed on a dramatic level. But there is no denying its skill in rendering its chosen milieu with an intense visual immediacy.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Frank Scheck
Whether outsiders will find much to appreciate in The TV Set is another question because the film fails to provide the thematic resonance of similarly themed predecessors like the brilliant "Network."- The Hollywood Reporter
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Kirk Honeycutt
One either likes this sort of thing or not. Even fans might not buy the ending in which more people get wiped out than in Hurricane Katrina.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
Tpicture delivers the requisite number of pratfalls, and the genial Ice Cube makes for a credibly hapless everyman, but the comedy still feels a little too safely soft around the edges.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Ray Bennett
It succeeds on almost all fronts. The epic film is a high-octane adventure rooted in fact with a raft of arresting characters, big action sequences and twists and turns galore.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
The blissfully silly Blades of Glory is one of those rare comedies that puts a goofy smile on your face with the premise alone -- and keeps it planted there right until its wacky finale.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Kirk Honeycutt
The most un-Disneylike cartoon yet from Disney animation. The thing is a hellzapoppin' of eccentric characters, zany situations and wacky gizmos, but little effort has gone into making any of this connect with an audience.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
Once again Bier demonstrates just how misleading appearances can be, as she artfully removes the veneers concealing the dark truths locked away by her intriguing characters.- The Hollywood Reporter
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James Greenberg
Loaded with obtuse symbolism, the film is not only hard to understand, it isn't much fun trying to figure it out.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Frank Scheck
Although more than a little familiar in its road movie-style romantic banter and bickering, the film is easy to take for a number of reasons, including the witty and frequently caustic dialogue. Modest in its aspirations, "Race You" succeeds by not trying to do too much.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Kirk Honeycutt
Brilliantly sung by an extremely talented lyric theater company in Cape Town called Dimpho Di Kopane. Whether this all works will be a matter of opinion -- mine is that it does not -- but the experiment is fascinating.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Kirk Honeycutt
If the movie only lavished as much thought and care on its characters as it does on each intricate set piece, Shooter might have been a classic.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Michael Rechtshaffen
The Hills Have Eyes 2 proves that even grisly, gory violence can be awfully boring.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
A reasonably engaging movie filled with fun visual effects and an appealing tone reminiscent of a certain Spielberg movie about an out-of-his-element extraterrestrial.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Kirk Honeycutt
Terrence Howard delivers another solid lead performance and competition swimming is a new arena for such films. Nonetheless, Pride is just plain trite.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
John DeFore
It doesn't exploit our emotions about Sept. 11; it simply tells a story that exists because of what happened that day -- one that should resonate with a wide, appreciative audience.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Kirk Honeycutt
A tad too conservative and calculated. CGI delivers best on moody sets and a noirish atmosphere achieved by lighting, backgrounds and visual effects. But the characters look like plastic dolls, and the story is recycled sci-fi.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
At best a kitschy "Catch Me If You Can" and at worst a tedious comedy that grows more tiresome by every self-consciously irreverent minute.- The Hollywood Reporter
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Reviewed by
Sheri Linden
The actors, all strong, give the lyrical but never artificial dialogue the ring of life. Pearce is riveting as a go-getter who finds himself trapped between a murky past and a future defined by ambition.- The Hollywood Reporter
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