The Playlist's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 4,876 reviews, this publication has graded:
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56% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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41% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1.7 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 67
| Highest review score: | Days of Being Wild (re-release) | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Oh, Ramona! |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 3,041 out of 4876
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Mixed: 1,320 out of 4876
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Negative: 515 out of 4876
4876
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Gregory Ellwood
We’d be reminiscent to not admit this is the sort of movie that’s hard to shake. We haven’t been able to stop thinking about it since. Considering how rare that is, maybe that’s just as gracious a compliment as admitting to bawling while the credits roll.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 1, 2023
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Elena Lazic
Like style, one expects an endearing earnestness from a Mann film, and watching emotionally stunted men discuss love or beauty, like Enzo does during the motor discussion with his son, is always delightful. But all this beauty and sincerity gets undermined by strangely unfocused, dispassionate storytelling. And coming from a filmmaker like Mann, that’s a big surprise.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 31, 2023
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Rafaela Sales Ross
If in his previous films about the regime Larraín often opted for subtlety, in El Conde elusiveness is a foreign notion. It is thrilling to watch the director repeatedly hit the nail in the head without much desire—or care—to engage with subtext.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 31, 2023
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Reviewed by
Rodrigo Perez
If this E6 portrait gets anything right it’s the chaotic creativity that seemed to burst out of many of its members like exploding sunlight their bodies could not handle as if something out of a kooky sci-fi film.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 25, 2023
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Christian Gallichio
It’s a weird movie, to be sure, but never an off-putting one. It’s also one that sometimes feels like a chimera itself, pushing various genres and ideas together without fully synthesizing them. But it’s consistently beautiful, watchable, and a truly memorable debut for Oren.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 24, 2023
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Andrew Crump
Normally, ego married with naivety is a bummer. In “birth/rebirth,” it’s gut-chilling.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 18, 2023
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- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 15, 2023
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Reviewed by
Nick Allen
There are a few rushes in this movie’s incredibly calculated rendition of Mardenborough’s tale, thanks to Blomkamp. But Sony is transparent with this adaptation, which has no ambitions to make Gran Turismo any more challenging than gamer bait.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 15, 2023
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Christian Gallichio
If anything, the murder is tertiary to the gossipy takes and fanciful camera work — this film is built around vibes, right down to its pulsating score by the electronic musician Koreless and its dancehall end credits.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 15, 2023
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Rodrigo Perez
Heart Of Stone purports to have characters made of sturdy, gritty, golden, unbreakable stuff, but that’s a tagline, not a movie or story; it’s really just flimsy work easily tossed off and broken as it tumbles into the ever-filling bin of barely-one-use Netflix movies.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 14, 2023
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Reviewed by
Nick Allen
In this movie’s wise deconstruction of its characters, “Mutant Mayhem” does the seemingly impossible and makes the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cool again.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 4, 2023
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Christian Gallichio
Gladstone manages to sell every emotion, moving from despair to wonder as the journey continues.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 1, 2023
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Reviewed by
Brian Farvour
They Cloned Tyrone is far from bad, but does require patience and the ability to shed those feelings of “I’ve seen this before” that pop up from time to time. Fortunately, the cast is here to help usher one along and maintain some sort of momentum before the film starts propelling forward on its own.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 1, 2023
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Christian Gallichio
Only time will tell if The Beanie Bubble represents the final dying gasp or merely the end of first-wave product-driven narratives. But, like Beanie Babies themselves, one hopes that this bubble will burst sooner rather than later.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 1, 2023
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Reviewed by
Brian Farvour
It’s hard to say if this is worth a view, as die-hard Cage fans might not see anything necessarily new, nor does the overall arc of the plotline break any new ground other than to offer a platform for Cage to again roll out his usual bag of acting tricks.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 1, 2023
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Charles Bramesco
Cobweb might just fill you with the sadistic glee that you can only get from horror films that push the boundaries of the genre. It’s not perfect. Hell, it might not even be “good.” But Cobweb is an absolute delight and a blast to watch.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 24, 2023
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Jason Bailey
Hamm makes himself look bland, which is no small accomplishment. But he’s also smothering much of what makes him an exciting actor.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 24, 2023
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Marya E. Gates
Winner of the Caméra d’Or for the best first feature film last month at the Cannes Film Festival, writer-director Pham Thien An’s Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell is a deeply felt three-hour spiritual odyssey about grief in its many forms.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 20, 2023
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Brian Farvour
Whether a viewer might be a fan of Wham! or not is ultimately irrelevant, as Chris Smith has produced something as incendiary as any of Wham!’s hits.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 20, 2023
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Rodrigo Perez
The Deepest Breath isn’t hiding the fact that there are daring hazards involved with athletes risking their lives for world records, but it isn't exactly forthcoming either, and the failure to effectively thread that needle is its biggest problem.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 20, 2023
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Marshall Shaffer
Oppenheimer lands with nothing short of the mighty impact suggested by its legendary stature. But Nolan is less interested in reifying myths so much as he’s invested in rectifying them.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 19, 2023
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Marshall Shaffer
Gerwig amplifies this feeling of liberation through understanding one’s confinement to Messianic lengths by the end of “Barbie.” Yet her and Baumbach’s screenplay foregrounds countless other intimate choices, too. It’s here where characters can opt to see the complexities of their identity as both complementary and independent. This is existentialism for consideration and consumption alike.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 18, 2023
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Reviewed by
Gregory Ellwood
While the film elegantly considers the relationship between Feña and their father in the third act, it still feels like something is missing from that aspect of the picture. Especially after Feña’s anxious build-up to his arrival.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 18, 2023
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Rodrigo Perez
Crafted with stillness, empathy, and clever drollness, “Fremont” is so striking it will simply and calmly demand your attention. So seemingly introverted, humble, and unassuming, it’ll force you to lean in, listen and heed all the humorous words of wisdom in its many little moments of providence.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 18, 2023
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Lena Wilson
Mamacruz is finely crafted, if not particularly challenging. This film clearly wants to wrestle with taboos, but that revolutionary spirit doesn’t go much further than the basic premise. With such important themes, this film deserves to be a bit more memorable than it ultimately is.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 10, 2023
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Reviewed by
Simon Thompson
While it may be time, and somewhat bittersweet, to say goodbye to the Lamberts and their parapsychological baggage, this is a well-conceived and impressively executed finale to the saga. It also proves that Wilson has what it takes both behind and in front of the camera. It’s a little scary how multitalented he is.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 6, 2023
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Reviewed by
Rodrigo Perez
Largely exhilarating across the board, ‘Dead Reckoning’ is easily the best installment thus far (at least for this writer who has desperately wanted that aforementioned pulse), and perhaps precisely because the movie is actually about something this time.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 5, 2023
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Reviewed by
Rodrigo Perez
It’s a striking and intimate piece of cinema, a heartrending tale of living with and battling neurological disorders, the love necessary to endure it, and the anguished dolor of remembrance.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 30, 2023
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Reviewed by
Chris Barsanti
Foster tackles this material in the high-velocity fashion common to many stranger-than-fiction documentaries about people gleefully living outside the law. There is a lot for him to work with, one vivid and outlandish anecdote spilling into another.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 23, 2023
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Reviewed by
Brian Farvour
It’s not a bad movie by any means, but in its attempts to plant a seed audiences may remember in years to come, it’s a misfire.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 22, 2023
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Reviewed by