For 20,278 reviews, this publication has graded:
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46% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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49% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 4.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 61
| Highest review score: | Short Cuts | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Gummo |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 9,380 out of 20278
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Mixed: 8,434 out of 20278
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Negative: 2,464 out of 20278
20278
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Nicolas Rapold
A House Made of Splinters is made with such aching sensitivity that it’s a marvel a camera was used and not some form of mind-meld.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 22, 2023
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Vincent Canby
Jeanne Dielman... has been described as minimalist, though I don't see how any film this long and so packed with information could be equated with minimalism as defined in painting. The manner of the film is spare, but the terrible, obsessive monotony of the life it observes is ultimately as melodramatic as, say, Roman Polanski's ''Repulsion.''- The New York Times
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Ben Kenigsberg
The Rules of the Game is among the most perfectly balanced of films: a movie about discretion that is in every way a model of it.- The New York Times
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Vincent Canby
Jacques Tati's most brilliant film, a bracing reminder in this all-too-lazy era that films can occasionally achieve the status of art.- The New York Times
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Manohla Dargis
In A Thousand and One, [Rockwell] packs a great deal into her filmmaking, which bristles with looks, gestures, bodies in breakneck motion and expressionistic jolts of color that — like Gary Gunn’s gorgeous score — complicate and deepen the outwardly simple story.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 30, 2023
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Reviewed by
Wesley Morris
There’s a sharpness to the comedy, some attitude and freshness, some wisdom. That maybe comes, in part, from the kids looking a little older than their characters are. It also comes from Payne’s emotional finesse.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 26, 2023
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Reviewed by
Devika Girish
By the time we get to the film’s closing scenes . . . this modest documentary becomes something epic — a microcosm of the eternal cycles of life.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 21, 2023
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20 Days in Mariupol, a relentless and truly important documentary, engulfs us in the initial ferocity of Russia’s siege of a city whose name has become a byword for this war’s inhumanity: My Lai, Srebrenica, Aleppo, Mariupol.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 13, 2023
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Reviewed by
Wesley Morris
This is a work of discipline and structure. It’s a situation comedy in the best, classical sense: These people’s ethical problems are sometimes ours. I’ve been Beth. I’ve been Don. And I had to watch half of what they’re dealing with through my fingers.- The New York Times
- Posted May 25, 2023
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Lisa Kennedy
Exquisite use of close-ups, fluid editing and a deeply observant sound design renders Mack’s story tactile but also poetic, making plain that the salt here is the stuff of tears, the stuff of sorrows and of joys.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 2, 2023
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Manohla Dargis
There are moments in Earth Mama, a drama about motherhood at its most fragile, when the movie’s quiet intensity seems to settle in your chest, as if a heavy stone had been placed over your heart.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 13, 2023
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Manohla Dargis
Totem is a coming into consciousness story about a child navigating realms — human and animal, spiritual and material — that exist around her like overlapping concentric circles. Yet even as the story’s focus sharpens, what matters here are the characters: their emotions and worried words, how they hold it together and fall apart, their individual habits and shared habitat.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 25, 2024
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Brandon Yu
Watching its sequences, you can feel both the immediacy of each moment and the nostalgia that’s already seeping in — each snippet of life becoming, by the minute, just a flicker in the teenagers’ minds, like the flashes in the film’s montages, immortalizing their youth before it’s lost to time’s grasp.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 8, 2023
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Manohla Dargis
Preciado’s superpower in this warm, generous movie is that while he speaks brilliantly to the cages of identity, he sees — and shares — a way out of them. He talks and listens, he exhorts and confesses. He insists on pleasure, speaks to happiness, invites laughter and opens worlds. Here, joy reigns supreme, and it is exhilarating.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 9, 2023
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Bosley Crowther
Neither comedy nor tragedy altogether, it is a brilliant weaving of comic and tragic strands, eloquent, tearful and beguiling with supreme virtuosity.- The New York Times
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Devika Girish
The pleasure lies in the telling — the invention of fictions, the performance of emotions — rather than in the details of plot. Once you lose yourself in the thickets of “Trenque Lauquen,” you won’t want to be found.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 21, 2023
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Devika Girish
The pleasure lies in the telling — the invention of fictions, the performance of emotions — rather than in the details of plot. Once you lose yourself in the thickets of “Trenque Lauquen,” you won’t want to be found.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 21, 2023
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Calum Marsh
The flashbacks are well-written and add off-the-court dramatic interest, but it’s the basketball action that is the movie’s claim to excellence. Expertly staged and beautifully rendered using a combination of computer-generated imagery and traditional hand-drawn animation, it’s often so spectacular that I am eager to watch again.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 27, 2023
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Lisa Kennedy
Simon’s belief in the interconnectedness yet singularity of the varied patients is palpable. She rewards our patience with a deeper understanding of our bodies and ourselves.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 3, 2023
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Manohla Dargis
Love suffuses Pictures of Ghosts, a cleareyed, deeply personal and formally inspired rumination on life, death, family, movies and those complicated, invariably haunted places we call home.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 25, 2024
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Natalia Winkelman
Lovingly detailed and accented by an aching score from Ryuichi Sakamoto, who died in March, Monster is one of the finest films of the year, and its structure — like its circle of characters — carries secrets that can only be unraveled through patience and empathy.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 22, 2023
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Manohla Dargis
Time is stretched differently in Occupied City and passes far more quickly than you might imagine, despite the running time. Some of this has to do with the fluidity of McQueen’s filmmaking and how the disparate parts build power cumulatively. Much of this, though, has to do with how McQueen approaches the past.- The New York Times
- Posted May 20, 2023
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Alissa Wilkinson
In a phenomenological way, The Taste of Things captures the joy of variety injected into mere existence: savory and sweet, hot and sour, juice and cream and astringency are not required for pure subsistence, but the rich range of taste we have created in our daily meals says something about human longings not easily put into words.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 8, 2024
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Bosley Crowther
It's as warming as a Manhattan cocktail and as juicy as a porterhouse steak.- The New York Times
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Concepción de León
This stunning film, directed by Jesse Short Bull and Laura Tomaselli, interleaves interviews of Lakota activists and elders with striking images of the Black Hills and its wildlife, historical documents and news reports, clips from old movies and other archival footage to extraordinary effect, demonstrating not only the physical and cultural violence inflicted on the Lakota but also their deep connection to the Black Hills, the area where Mount Rushmore was erected.- The New York Times
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Bosley Crowther
The Warners have pulled all the stops in making this picture the acme of the gangster-prison film. They have crammed it with criminal complications—some of them old, some of them glittering new—pictured to technical perfection in a crisp documentary style. And Mr. Cagney has played it in a brilliantly graphic way, matching the pictorial vigor of his famous "Public Enemy" job.- The New York Times
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Reviewed by
Manohla Dargis
The movie is overflowing with ideas — about history, capitalism, cinema, representation — but it also tests your patience before amply rewarding it.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 22, 2024
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Manohla Dargis
It’s far rarer when a movie, as this one does, speaks to everyday life and to the beauty of a world that we neglect even in the face of its calamitous loss.- The New York Times
- Posted May 2, 2024
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Reviewed by
Beatrice Loayza
This shamelessly ambitious epic is about, among other things, civilizational collapse and existential retribution, yet it is held together by something delicate.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 4, 2024
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Reviewed by
Brandon Yu
It’s a tightly controlled vision that, like many parables, induces a sense of the suddenly, viscerally new — in the look of a figure against the ocean, or the words of a mother telling her child to run — in what we’ve seen before and have always known.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 29, 2023
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