The Telegraph's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 2,484 reviews, this publication has graded:
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50% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 0.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 66
| Highest review score: | Louis Theroux: Inside the Manosphere | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Cats |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,188 out of 2484
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Mixed: 1,122 out of 2484
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Negative: 174 out of 2484
2484
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
This prodding, acidic, bumpy-but-worthwhile movie is about even the world’s consenting creatures winding up with nothing they really wanted, while a dog submits to human will just to make us feel like we’re the ones in charge.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
Nerve zips along, looks really smashing and has the mental wiring of a hyperactive squirrel. You may well risk it anyway.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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Reviewed by
Robbie Collin
Collet-Serra’s rigorous craftsmanship and Lively’s muscular-in-every-sense movie-star performance – the film takes Olympic-level pleasure in watching her swimming, leaping, fighting, scrambling, enduring – ensure every attack and counterattack convulses and grips.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
Give the film this much: it’s egalitarian in its imbecility.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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Reviewed by
Robbie Collin
Happily, what’s in no short supply is the same mix of uproarious failure and sledgehammer pathos that Brent at his best was always all about.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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Robbie Collin
When you compare Suicide Squad to what James Gunn and Marvel Studios achieved in Guardians of the Galaxy – low-profile property, oddball characters, make-it-fun brief – the film makes you cringe so hard your teeth come loose. But it’s a slog even on its own crushingly puerile terms.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 2, 2016
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Tim Robey
Hunting Bourne is more than ever a business now, with a bottom line to worry about, a crowd to please, and presumably hasty deadlines to meet. It’s not that there’s no pause for thought in this still-good-fun episode. There’s just not enough thought in the pauses.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 26, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
An artistic spin on tragedy that’s deft, witty, very well-acted, and more diverting than it is profound.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 22, 2016
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Tim Robey
In fairness to Beyond, it makes very few promises it can't keep, but also goes halfway out on every limb it can find, risking next to nothing.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 15, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
Robbie lights up her scenes with the much more special effect of raw personality.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 14, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
Constructed to fool the viewer with layer upon layer of lame cheats and moth-eaten devices, the film has nothing on its mind but sinking you gently into an in-flight stupor.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 14, 2016
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Reviewed by
Robbie Collin
Don’t underestimate the knitwear in Maggie’s Plan. This comedy from Rebecca Miller says more about the human condition through its cardigans than most films this summer have managed in their scripts.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 14, 2016
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 14, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
A seamless patchwork of reminiscences, tracing John’s voyage into darkness with an astute and sensitive cinematic imagination.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 14, 2016
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Reviewed by
Robbie Collin
Its jokes, effects and sparkler-bright cast chemistry need nothing to fall back on.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 10, 2016
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Reviewed by
Robbie Collin
You’ve seen almost everything here before, but never within the same film.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 6, 2016
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Reviewed by
Robbie Collin
While you can’t imagine the film ever making it to Cannes under anything other than its own steam, the jaunt proves to be a surprisingly worthwhile one.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 30, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
There may not have been such an awkwardly homoerotic bromance-seduction on film since Jim Carrey molested Matthew Broderick in The Cable Guy, but it’s one of Central Intelligence’s redeeming features that it’s generously forgiving, rather than nastily phobic, of Bob’s quirks.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 30, 2016
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We may not be convinced by Ben’s backstory, but we believe in his tense, uneasy friendship with Trevor.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 28, 2016
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- Critic Score
Arriving under the radar, The Meddler is a surprise treat. Go see it with your mother.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 28, 2016
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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Reviewed by
Robbie Collin
Perhaps this meeting of suspicious minds really was an unsung crux of modern American history, but Elvis & Nixon feels like a trifle about a trifle.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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Robbie Collin
To borrow a screenwriting buzz-phrase, "fun and games" is all you get, and the lack of meaningful connective tissue between the antics means the film begins to flag far earlier than it should.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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Robbie Collin
This isn’t just lazy, it’s borderline nonsensical. Resurgence inflates the scale of the alien threat to such a preposterous degree – the mothership takes up roughly an eighth of the Earth’s total surface – that the queues of honking traffic and rooftop helicopter rescues we’re supposed to invest in can’t help but feel like microscopic trifles.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 21, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
The level of psychological nuance in Desch’s script, not to mention feminist enlightenment, makes EL James look like Virginia Woolf.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 20, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
It’s a film whose final shape feels dwindled by compromise – not unappealing, but stymied, like a luxury jet which spends two hours taxiing on the runway.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 20, 2016
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Reviewed by
Robbie Collin
Navigates tricky emotional territory with a perceptiveness and tact that isn’t just great storytelling, but could be a real comfort to parents and children alike who unexpectedly see themselves in Dory’s plight.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 15, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
There’s gentle manipulation, and then there’s having your arms manacled to a freight train of weepy catharsis, which is roughly the experience awaiting viewers of Me Before You.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 2, 2016
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Would The Do-Over be a spectacular triumph if it’s two stars had played the material relatively straight? Probably not. But the terrible jokes wouldn’t have got in the way of all that plot.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 29, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tim Robey
The whole business, this time, is passable eye candy without being any kind of brain candy.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 26, 2016
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