The Playlist's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
For 4,848 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 56% higher than the average critic
  • 3% same as the average critic
  • 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: 100 Days of Being Wild (re-release)
Lowest review score: 0 Oh, Ramona!
Score distribution:
4848 movie reviews
  1. Careful and deliberate character work in the script paints a striking picture of two friends who are outcasts in their little world yet still find a way to integrate into a community.
  2. For a romantic comedy, Photograph is a little light on romance or comedy, but it makes up for this in thoughtfulness and charm. Photograph is a wistful, old-fashioned romance for those struggling to move forward with one foot in the past.
  3. Fletcher’s inventive reimagining of several musical numbers, in particular, blends striking visuals and affecting storytelling.
  4. It bears the aesthetic and thematic hallmarks of an expertly rendered film with an impressively nuanced subjectivity.
  5. There may not be a map for navigating this gonzo film, but nevertheless, Bacurau is a blood-soaked adventure worth seeking out.
  6. Ash Mayfair’s debut film is an astonishing achievement for a first feature, one not every film-goer will be able to stomach, but a work every caring cinephile should see.
  7. A sensitive, if occasionally orthodox, treatment of a compassionate friendship enacted in the face of societal apathy.
  8. A hilarious and twisted festival amuse-bouche with tremendous cult appeal.
  9. As a film, it shuffles around, shouting out the one thing it’s desperate for: ‘Purpose!’
  10. Daniel tells Natasha of his elements for falling in love, “My ingredients are friendship, chemistry, the X factor,” and he assures her that they have that last one. But that’s what The Sun Is Also a Star lacks: that ineffable quality that makes it work. Though we spend nearly two hours in its presence, it never makes us fall in love with it, despite its best efforts.
  11. Despite a tone that oscillates between quirkish and mawkish, it’s yet another warmed-over male midlife crisis movie, given supposedly higher stakes because the middle of life will be as far as this male will get.
  12. While the overwrought dialogue does test attention spans, its prevailing message — humanity is malignant and inherently wicked— and the hint of something more cryptic makes Passon’s film beautifully disturbing.
    • 73 Metascore
    • 83 Critic Score
    John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum is a sure-fire hit and continues the momentum set forth by the previous installments only to surpass them with explosive energy.
  13. The Hustle is profoundly stupid and it treats its audience as though they’re even less intelligent than it is.
  14. A thin but heartfelt piece of work ... But with Ferrara content to let his subject mostly drive the show and not impose more of an authorial vision and context that could have created a grander narrative about the history of moviegoing in New York, the passion is missing.
  15. You absolutely want to hang out with these charming, amusing women off-screen, but the time spent with their on-screen counterparts isn’t nearly as fun as you’d hope.
  16. The restraint with which Youmans characterizes is refreshing, but the performances can also feel diminished by inscrutable elements, whether that’s missing narrative context or simply parts of scenes that are simply hard to see or hear entirely. Still, Burning Cane would be an impressive debut at any age, showing a distinct style, a suggestive eye for setting and detail, and an admirable willingness to experiment.
  17. Beyond the strength of the visuals, there’s promise in the young cast that you see glimpses of here. ... However, it’s never enough to make “Gully” worth watching. Its raw, gritty approach feels like an effort from the filmmakers, but it’s mostly work for the audience to endure.
  18. A noir-ish melodrama so oversaturated with dourness that it borders on parody.
  19. Equal parts choppy and charming, “See You Yesterday” has trouble balancing quirk and melodrama.
  20. Despite its flaws, it goes down easy and guiltlessly, like cheap champagne.
  21. Lyrical, emotional, and intuitive, but also meandering in its ephemeral flitting from reality to the imaginary world.
  22. There aren’t enough synonyms for the word courage to do Sasha Neulinger’s story real justice. Rewind, is simply an astounding movie and a milestone in psychiatrically minded filmmaking.
  23. And while it’s a difficult sit sometimes, “17 Blocks” is essential viewing for anyone interested in how the confluence of race and class have codified into a sort of informal caste for an entire subsection of America’s citizenry.
  24. Thankfully, ‘Recorder’ salvages its lack of narrative control with enough emotional weight to earn its memorability.
  25. A staggering accomplishment in its storytelling, visuals, and performance.
  26. [A] bland, sometimes dull film ... Those unfamiliar with the history of the Manson Family murders won’t gain any real understanding of the crimes or the character of those who committed them, while those who know the details won’t get any new insights into it either.
  27. Detective Pikachu is a fun, occasionally-funny, and almost always-beautiful to look at kids adventure film that doesn’t insult the intelligence of its audience and offers them great, positive lessons that are earned.
  28. The Intruder is a blunt but effective instrument. This thriller lacks subtlety and craft, but it succeeds at what it’s intending to do: keep the audience stress-eating popcorn for 100 minutes and leave entirely satisfied with the experience they just had. It’s not a good movie, but boy, is it fun.
  29. Gentle but sharply observed, Good Posture is an uncommon cinematic look at an intergenerational female relationship.

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