For 10,435 reviews, this publication has graded:
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51% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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46% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.5 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 62
| Highest review score: | Badlands | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | A Life Less Ordinary |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 5,578 out of 10435
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Mixed: 3,745 out of 10435
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Negative: 1,112 out of 10435
10435
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Mike D'Angelo
It’s a movie to be mildly enjoyed and then left behind — apropos, given the subject matter.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Apr 2, 2015
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
Packed with rare footage from the band’s early years, and narrated through present-day sit-down interviews, it’s pop oral history at its most formless and fannish: fixated on juicy tidbits, points of influences, and historical cameos, and sorely lacking a point of view.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Apr 1, 2015
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Reviewed by
Mike D'Angelo
Consequently, anyone coming to Ned Rifle cold will be bewildered. But there are numerous pleasures for the initiated, from Ryan’s continuing dissolute mellifluence as Henry Fool to Simon’s rebirth as a terrible stand-up comic constantly monitoring the comments on his blog.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Apr 1, 2015
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Reviewed by
Jesse Hassenger
As is, Cheatin’ offers little narrative or emotional advantage over watching a series of the director’s more concise works. At 76 minutes, it should play like a short feature. Instead, it’s more like an extra-long short.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Apr 1, 2015
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Reviewed by
Jesse Hassenger
The series will doubtless continue on with Diesel, Rodriguez, Johnson, and the rest, but in the meantime, Furious 7 comes to the most conclusive and emotionally satisfying ending since, fittingly, the very first film.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Apr 1, 2015
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A.A. Dowd
An early contender for the most Weinstein movie of the year, Woman In Gold bends a complicated legal quagmire—heavy on questions of ownership and national responsibility—into a crowd-pleasing David and Goliath story. The title, too generic for Klimt’s masterpiece, suits the movie just fine.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Apr 1, 2015
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Jesse Hassenger
Whaley aims high for this sort of material, but his film, sweet as it is, gets a little too precocious.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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Reviewed by
Mike D'Angelo
This feels more like porn than any solo feature Clark has ever made, in part because his non-pro cast is unusually wooden even by his standards.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 25, 2015
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Vadim Rizov
Played as a kind of constant wake, grimly marching on to tragedy, Serena is hurt by relentless applications of Johan Söderqvist’s unimaginatively somber score and DP Morten Søborg’s reliance on lots of over-the-shoulder handheld shots, the camera swinging close to and around people’s faces and shoulders.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 25, 2015
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Mike D'Angelo
Boys will be boys and wealthy a--holes will be wealthy a--holes in The Riot Club, an alleged cautionary tale that revels in bad behavior for nearly two hours before finally offering up a stern “tsk, tsk, tsk.” Unlike the great gangster and outlaw movies, however, this unpleasant, moralistic film doesn’t succeed in making transgression look cathartically appealing.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 25, 2015
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Whether snapping single-person portraits or expansive group shots, each of Salgado’s subjects is a unique and distinctive being. Their individuality resonates despite the fact that the world weighs heavy on them, threatening anonymity.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 25, 2015
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Reviewed by
Jesse Hassenger
Though it opens with the studio’s seemingly mandatory voice-over setup, the story itself, adapted from the children’s book "The True Meaning Of Smekday," shows immediate conceptual audacity.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 25, 2015
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Reviewed by
Jesse Hassenger
Ferrell and Hart are too likable and crowd-pleasing to let the movie collapse around them. But they’re also too talented for something this wan.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 25, 2015
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A.A. Dowd
Laying out its anxieties right there in the title, While We’re Young is Noah Baumbach’s midlife crisis movie, a funny, talky portrait of an aging artist reaching for the vitality he sees in some younger friends.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 25, 2015
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A.A. Dowd
As a curious hodgepodge of ideas, White God gets by. But the releasing-of-the-hounds at the start is a bad omen. The film, like the dogs, mostly goes downhill.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 25, 2015
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
This is a film set entirely in places where people aren’t meant to stay for very long, a world of continual transit and gratification, with no endpoint. Maybe it’s the world that money creates for itself.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 25, 2015
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
The character of Houellebecq implicitly understands that this is just a transaction, and doesn’t take it personally. It’s too bad that, like so much of the movie, this germ of satire is never developed past the point of premise.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 24, 2015
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
A deranged melodrama where any sense of soapy, campy fun is undercut by the preachy, self-serious tone.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 23, 2015
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At its simplest, She’s Lost Control is a tale of girl meets boy (where “boy” is the lead’s latest client, Johnny, played by Marc Menchaca), and at its potential worst, just another attempt to probe the line between sex and self though the figure of the sex worker.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 19, 2015
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Reviewed by
Mike D'Angelo
Part of what made Edgar Wright’s "The World’s End" so refreshing was the way that it feinted at being a certain tired sort of movie before suddenly making a wild leap in another direction. Growing Up And Other Lies, is exactly the mediocre movie that The World’s End was pretending to be.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 19, 2015
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Reviewed by
Katie Rife
Without effective characterization to drive the moments in between, the spectacle of humans painfully, extensively, gratuitously suffering for their arrogance is more sadistic than thrilling.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 19, 2015
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A.A. Dowd
A film about taking chances takes its own big chance, risking ridicule with a third act that’s at once sweet, amusing, lackadaisical, and more than a little preposterous.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 18, 2015
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
Everything signals birth—of Argentina, cinema, the nuclear family—until Dinesen descends into a womb-like cave and Jauja takes a hard left turn into enigma. Even the title is a mystery, the Spanish byword for a land of plenty.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 18, 2015
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
The Gunman is too disorganized and sloppy to make sense as political commentary or to work on the most basic level as a globe-trotting chase thriller.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 18, 2015
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Jesse Hassenger
Tracers, then, is unavoidably a movie about Taylor Lautner joining a parkour gang, and often exactly as silly as that sounds. But it’s also a major improvement over Lautner’s last action-thriller, "Abduction," which had little action, few thrills, and zero abductions.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 18, 2015
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Reviewed by
Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
This is the kind of thing that should come effortlessly to Pacino, one of the all-time greats of American acting, but no longer does. In fact, this qualifies as his best and most easygoing film performance in a good decade.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 18, 2015
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Jesse Hassenger
Steeliness comes naturally to, say, Jennifer Lawrence, but when Woodley unleashes the occasional voice-cracking battle cry, it generates tension between her desire for revolution and her utter believability as a teenager with more earnest ideals than ruthless training.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 18, 2015
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Mike D'Angelo
Ultimately, despite Kikuchi’s expressively dour performance and David Zellner’s formal invention... Kumiko feels like a collection of amusing and/or depressing riffs stitched together within a context that barely matters.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 17, 2015
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A.A. Dowd
The artificiality is funny but also thematically resonant: This is a film about fake feelings, the invented romance for which two strangers forfeited their futures. And to Hausner, such a colossal waste of potential deserves not a melodramatic tribute, but the cinematic equivalent of an eye-roll.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 17, 2015
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Reviewed by
Josh Modell
As a documentary, Champs feels a bit punch-drunk — weaving from one idea to the next while never quite zoning in on any particular target for too long.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 12, 2015
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