The Hollywood Reporter's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 12,889 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: 6,598 out of 12889
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Mixed: 5,126 out of 12889
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Negative: 1,165 out of 12889
12889
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
John DeFore
The easiest (but incomplete) answer is that the George W. Bush era needed a Borat, and the Trump years make him painfully redundant.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 22, 2020
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Frank Scheck
Despite the stylistic glitches, Radium Girls proves engrossing, thanks to its powerful real-life tale and the excellent performances by leads King and Quinn, who make us fully care about their characters' fates.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 22, 2020
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Frank Scheck
American Selfie inevitably feels a bit scattershot at times, no doubt due to the vagaries of Pelosi's travel schedule and her guerilla shooting approach. Some of the footage is revelatory, some feels overly familiar.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 21, 2020
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David Rooney
I would love to have seen what a boldly idiosyncratic fantasist like del Toro could have done with this story. But there's plenty here for audiences looking for family entertainment that balances darkness with a buoyant sense of mischief. At the very least, it's a lively step up from Zemeckis' last two films, "Allied" and "Welcome to Marwen."- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 21, 2020
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Frank Scheck
That the film proves intriguing despite its overly familiar themes is a testament to the acting more than the writing. Eaton delivers a compelling, highly physical performance, using her endlessly expressive eyes to communicate her character's complex range of emotions and making us care about Liv despite the contrived plot mechanics.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 20, 2020
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John DeFore
Looks like a promotional obligation when compared to the best of its predecessors: Despite its star's clear desire to expose the personal roots of the songs here, the film's execution makes it feel like an audiobook accompanied by lovely images.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 19, 2020
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Robyn Bahr
Perhaps Byrne wants to keep his hour-and-a-half story light, but it's so airy it practically floats away.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 19, 2020
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John DeFore
Morgan's script generously allows us to deduce the truth just before Abe stumbles across it, which is not to say it doesn't have some real surprises left. It's fun to watch Abe put A and B together, and to regain some of his self-respect in the process.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 19, 2020
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Robyn Bahr
A sloshy swill fermented in the hacked-up viscera of superior fantasy features — including Labyrinth, Hocus Pocus, Monster's Inc., Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Adventures in Babysitting — the film often sinks beneath the weight of its viscous plot. However, it burbles and thrives in moments that rely on aesthetics over story, director Rachel Talalay (Tank Girl) infusing genuine creepy tension with an à la mode witchy/techy visual motif.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2020
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John DeFore
Fans looking for an inspirational portrait of idealism will probably respond warmly to a film whose release is timed to World Food Day (October 16), a United Nations effort to highlight the cause nearest to Chapin's heart.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2020
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Frank Scheck
This is the sort of film for which the term "tearjerker" was invented, but this one jerks them so violently you may need medical attention afterwards.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2020
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Sheri Linden
The drama works only in fits and starts. The vague danger that shapes it, and the narrative's underlying emotional intricacies, are too often explained rather than felt.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2020
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Deborah Young
The story has a tendency to scatter at times, and it banks a lot on the humanity of the three main actors who have some heart-wrenching moments riding out the joys and sorrows of modern life, complicated by the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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Inkoo Kang
Freedia is such a charismatic guide — and the explanations for gun violence so familiar — that the documentary loses steam whenever she's off-screen for too long.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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Beandrea July
The playful sparring that Strathairn does with both Olmos and Sheen feels like everything you want to see from seasoned actors at this stage in their careers, and the dialogue always rings truest when Strathairn, Olmos and Sheen get to play against one another. The significant acting chops of this trio of leads is the primary reason the film is worth seeing.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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Stephen Dalton
White Riot is a timely, engaging exercise in social and cultural history, but a wider focus might have given it deeper context and broader marketability.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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Jordan Mintzer
And yet, what makes Greenland stand out is how, at certain times, what we’re watching doesn’t seem so spectacular, but very much like the real thing — albeit with a fair amount of VFX and Butler’s own brand of sweaty, stress-bucket bravado.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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Frank Scheck
Home movie footage shot by Judy during a period of Belushi's sobriety at the couple's summer home in Martha's Vineyard provides a poignant glimpse of the normal life he could have lived. That his early loss left so much potentially great work undone makes the documentary as much elegy as tribute.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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John DeFore
The movie's last act offers complications both expected and surprising. For the most part, it satisfies, especially in what proves to be the pic's most elaborate action sequence.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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David Rooney
Earlier films like Sightseers and Free Fire suggested Ben Wheatley might have the mordant wit to tackle a work forever associated with sardonic genre maestro Alfred Hitchcock. But in place of atmosphere and suspense, he delivers blandly glossy melodrama.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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Jordan Mintzer
It’s not quite enough to prevent this B-grade rendition from feeling rather familiar and unsuspenseful, even if stars Sydney Sweeney (Euphoria) and Madison Iseman (Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle) provide a decent level of tension throughout.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 13, 2020
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Robyn Bahr
Your patience for Girls' Rules may depend on how well you can tolerate slapstick set-ups.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 13, 2020
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Frank Scheck
Much like its central character, the film at least proves honest in its intentions.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 13, 2020
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Leslie Felperin
It's a film awash in scrupulously researched vintage production design, costumes and above all music, all rendered in a Technicolor palette that will send grandparents and fans of Golden Age cinema swooning with nostalgia.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 13, 2020
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John DeFore
A Die Hard ripoff that forgets most of the lessons that action classic has to teach, Ryuhei Kitamura's The Doorman forgets first of all what a little bit — even a shred — of wit can do for a movie that otherwise relies on bullets and brawn.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 12, 2020
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Jon Frosch
Pfeiffer's performance in this uneven but charming adaptation of Patrick deWitt's 2018 novel certainly isn't her subtlest, but it ranks among her most captivatingly Pfeiffer-ian.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 12, 2020
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David Rooney
The standout element of Evil Eye, however, is a riveting star turn from veteran Sarita Choudhury as a superstitious mother whose concern for her daughter spirals into a violent nightmare as past lives pierce the present.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 12, 2020
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Beandrea July
It’s the pairing of Bellingcat’s story of citizen journalism with the larger story of the state of media and its relationship to democracy that makes this documentary stand out. It’s frankly a relief to hear someone explain how we got here, how the culture of “fake news” came to rule the day, and then provide a clear example of how one group of people is standing up against it.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 12, 2020
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Leslie Felperin
This densely packed, exquisitely executed and just a teensy bit batshit film is peak Pixar. It's a vintage mix of the company's intricate storytelling, complex emotional intelligence, technical prowess and cerebral whimsy on dexamethasone.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 11, 2020
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Michael Rechtshaffen
A CG-animated musical fantasy that still manages to infuse sufficient charm and genuine warmth into the inescapable familiarity.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 9, 2020
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