The Hollywood Reporter's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 12,888 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 2.8 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: 6,598 out of 12888
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Mixed: 5,125 out of 12888
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Negative: 1,165 out of 12888
12888
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
Blood Brothers struggles under the weight of its subjects.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 8, 2021
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Frank Scheck
The overall pretentiousness and lack of humor make it more of a slog than a guilty pleasure.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 8, 2021
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Frank Scheck
That Best Sellers works to the extent that it does is a testament to Caine’s ultra-professionalism — he truly is a treasure who can make any film worth watching — and Plaza’s canny underplaying. They work together so well, you wish they were in a better movie.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 8, 2021
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Frank Scheck
The results, although sporadically arresting, feel awkward, like a child wearing clothing a few sizes too big.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 8, 2021
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David Rooney
Green has made exactly the kind of witless, worthless sequel that bled the franchise dry in the 1980s and ’90s.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 8, 2021
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Angie Han
The crime comedy ends not as a fat stack of jokes but a jumble of loose change — not entirely worthless, but not amounting to a whole lot, either.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 8, 2021
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Daniel Fienberg
While it’s occasionally stuck in very rote biographical details and frequently limited by a race to theaters and TV that doesn’t necessarily align with any real ending to the documentary’s story, Fauci has an actual structural focus that’s smartly considered and interesting, even if it left me with myriad questions.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 7, 2021
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David Rooney
As a character study of a man with good reason to wean himself off the very basic human instinct of hope and teach himself, even at some personal cost, to care for no one and nothing, Sundown gains texture from its stark setting in a seaside playground stained with blood. But of all the director’s films to date, this might be the most airless.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 7, 2021
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Frank Scheck
The filmmakers — superbly incorporating a combination of stunning archival footage (much of it previously unseen), dramatic reenactments and interviews with the principal figures — present the harrowing tale in riveting nail-biting fashion, leavened by welcome doses of mordant humor from the incredibly brave volunteers.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 6, 2021
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Lovia Gyarkye
Marcel the Shell With Shoes On is a film with much to offer when it comes to lessons and laughs. It even handles its primary themes about loss, grief and community with humor and grace, an approach that, these days, seems especially hard to find.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 6, 2021
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David Rooney
The reclusive Italian author’s familiar themes of female relationships, sexuality, motherhood and women’s struggle to carve a professional space outside it are beautifully served in this uncompromising character study, illuminated by performances of jagged brilliance from Olivia Colman and Jessie Buckley as her younger self.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 6, 2021
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John DeFore
For a casual fan who knows the band largely for swagger and self-indulgence, Bernard MacMahon’s Becoming Led Zeppelin is an eye-opening delight — a visit with charming old men who modestly recall the music-drunk paths they took to forming the defining band of the classic-rock ’70s.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 5, 2021
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Stephen Farber
It is far from a perfect film, but it tantalizes, thanks to the strong subject matter and the sharp characterizations and performances.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 5, 2021
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Frank Scheck
As an update to his 2002 effort on the same subject, Biggie and Tupac, this film provides new testimony about Knight and the alleged role of corrupt LAPD cops in Smalls’ murder. But it mostly proves a tired rehashing of familiar material that doesn’t justify its 105-minute running time.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 5, 2021
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David Rooney
Last Night in Soho is an immensely pleasurable film that delights in playing with genre, morphing from time-travel fantasy to dark fairy tale, from mystery to nightmarish horror in a climax that owes as much to ’60s Brit fright fare as to more contemporary mind-benders.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 4, 2021
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David Rooney
Not everything lands in Spencer, and I often wondered if the film was so set on bucking convention that it would alienate its audience. But it tells a sorrowful story we all think we know in a new and genuinely disturbing light.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
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David Rooney
The storytelling lacks the clean lines to make it consistently propulsive. Paradoxically, given its lofty position in the sci-fi canon, much of the narrative’s novelty has also been diluted, rendered stale by decades of imitation.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
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Reviewed by
Angie Han
The film’s mimicry might be deft enough to pass muster here and there. But it doesn’t take an eagle eye to notice that Kate‘s got few ideas of its own.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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David Rooney
A companion piece of sorts to First Reformed, this is another bruising character study of a solitary, burdened man who processes his most intimate thoughts in a journal, living with his guilt until he’s handed an unexpected opportunity for redemption.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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David Rooney
It’s the work of a director in full command of his gifts, from the kaleidoscopic vignettes of family life that make the first half such a constant delight through the supple modulation of tone midway, when shocking tragedy prompts a shift into a more ruminative mood.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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David Rooney
This is an exquisitely crafted film, its unhurried rhythms continually shifting as plangent notes of melancholy, solitude, torment, jealousy and resentment surface. Campion is in full control of her material, digging deep into the turbulent inner life of each of her characters with unerring subtlety.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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David Rooney
While Parallel Mothers doesn’t match the intricately interwoven layers of Almodóvar’s top-tier work — All About My Mother, Talk to Her, Pain and Glory — and some of its key plot disclosures can be seen coming, that doesn’t make the melodrama any less gripping or emotionally satisfying.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 1, 2021
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Lovia Gyarkye
The classic fairy tale and its straightforward but powerful lessons in self-confidence, perseverance and the power of imagination provide an alluring foundation for ambitious and visually stunning storytelling. It’s sad that, watching this version, you wouldn’t be able to tell.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 1, 2021
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Sheri Linden
Set in a rural village and cast with nonactors, led by a feral performance from dancer Wendy Chinchilla Araya, the drama occupies its own territory, tinged with magical realism and deeply immersed in the sensory world. It’s also a vivid reminder that even a matriarchy can be paternalistic.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 31, 2021
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Jordan Mintzer
You can feel Panahi drifting away from his director forefathers, including his own father, testing out new ideas and methods to see if they suit him, trying to find a different way to express himself. Like the older son in Hit the Road, he’s bravely venturing off into unknown territory for his first movie — although he also keeps one foot firmly planted in the past, creating the kind of quiet miracles Iranian cinema is known for.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 31, 2021
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Jordan Mintzer
Like a beltway surrounding its hero’s bloviating ego trips and massive libido, the film keeps turning in circles around a subject that’s only truly interesting if you’re Philip himself.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 31, 2021
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Deborah Young
Its bow in Cannes in the Special Screenings sidebar is amply justified by two whimsical exercises in art house cinema directed by Jafar Panahi and Apichatpong Weerasethakul. The other tales are quirky but mixed in impact.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 31, 2021
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Lovia Gyarkye
Vacation Friends is a droll and mildly salacious flick that revels in subverting the expectations of its central characters and, eventually, its viewers.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 27, 2021
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Robyn Bahr
He’s All That may be a flattened reflection of its predecessor, but both films are charming enough to get away with about one anal sex innuendo joke apiece.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 27, 2021
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