The Hollywood Reporter's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
For 12,888 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 2.8 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:
12888 movie reviews
  1. Ultimately neither funny nor touching enough to make much of an impact, but it does offer many small, insightful moments along the way.
  2. This adaptation of South African writer Olive Schreiner's cult novel is too cute by far, sapping emotional resonance from a story that was in its original incarnation apparently far darker.
  3. Despite a few design flaws, "Pants" should wear well with its young female demo.
  4. This agreeable remake still manages to go the distance.
  5. It's frustrating to see this wonderful-looking, laugh-out-loud funny survival tale fall short of its potential.
  6. Should attract some interest in urban theatrical situations before settling into cult video status.
  7. The film is thought-provoking but not terribly involving.
  8. Browne keeps it amusingly involving.
  9. A juicy Chinese-American romance about preserving "face" at the sacrifice of your whole being. This Sony Pictures Classics release is a comic gem.
  10. Sequins will tax the patience of most viewers not enthralled with endless close-ups of beads and brocades.
  11. Awfully dull, with scant evidence of the sort of things that make horror movies attractive -- like mounting suspense and spine-tingling creepiness and, oh yeah, the element of horror.
  12. A thought-provoking and involving film.
  13. Pantoliano brings his usual degree of wily, understated humor to his role and is ably supported by the terrific ensemble, but he's unable to elevate a film that is ultimately as directionless as its protagonist.
  14. Well meaning but less than riveting in its execution, this documentary is far better suited for public television exposure than theatrical release.
  15. The final episode of George Lucas' cinematic epic "Star Wars" ends the six-movie series on such a high note that one feels like yelling out, "Rewind!" Yes, rewind through more than 13 hours of bravery, treachery, new worlds, odd creatures and human frailty.
  16. A fascinating account of its subject's self-torture over his inability to stop one of the 20th century's greatest tragedies.
  17. Director Renny Harlin's take on Agatha Christie's versatile "Ten Little Indians" is total B-movie swagger in all its unsubtle glory.
  18. Laughs-wise, it lacks the raucous edge of an "Old School" or "Anchorman" or the retro charm of an "Elf," but there's still plenty of Will-power to fuel this likable underdog trifle. It certainly is more enjoyable than a lot of what passes for family entertainment these days.
  19. A deeply dispiriting movie, not just because it is grindingly bad but because Jane Fonda actually chose this for her comeback after a 15-year absence from the screen. But it's worse than that. Fonda, one of the best actors of her generation, is downright awful in a role she could have -- and probably should have -- sleepwalked through.
  20. An action picture with the emotional simplicity of a bedtime story, painted in the grimy colors of the London underworld.
  21. Resistance is futile. It's impossible not to be swept up into the uplifting world of Mad Hot Ballroom, a documentary that can be neatly summed up as the "Spellbound" of competitive ballroom dancing.
  22. Yet another stylish exercise in depravity in which Huppert floats through the sordid proceedings in a calm haze. If only the film she inhabits was as sexy as it aspires to be.
  23. Smartly put together, with interesting characters and caustic wit.
  24. Garcia has his moments as a wild man but the script never really allows him to plumb the artist's emotional depths.
  25. A superb portrait of a father and son disguised as a docu about Haskell Wexler.
  26. Acting is similarly routine with the glorious exception of Hilton, who is so bad she steals the show.
  27. Fulfills the requirements of grand-scale moviemaking while serving as a timely reminder that in the conflict between Christianity and Islam it was the Christians who picked the first fight.
  28. More character study than sports movie, the people in this film come across very much as flesh-and-blood personalities despite the script's tendency to indulge in cliches and let characters deliver highly emotional speeches.
  29. Dull film about pedophilia that fails to shed any light on the topic.
  30. Everyone involved -- actors, crew, director Susanne Bier and screenwriter Anders Thomas Jensen in their second collaboration -- are in peak form in this unflinching look at repressed feelings and emotional devastation.

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