TheWrap's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 3,671 reviews, this publication has graded:
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55% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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43% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 0.2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 65
| Highest review score: | Always Be My Maybe | |
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| Lowest review score: | Love, Weddings & Other Disasters |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,240 out of 3671
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Mixed: 992 out of 3671
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Negative: 439 out of 3671
3671
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Elizabeth Weitzman
Presumably, Sudeikis took this job to prove his dramatic skills, and he does deserve credit for achieving that goal. What he’s never able to generate, though, is a compelling case for the movie itself.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 7, 2021
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Alonso Duralde
Fever Dream delivers its jolts with a whisper and not a scream, and its enigmatic final shot vibrates with a deep sense of dread, one that won’t leave after the lights come up.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 7, 2021
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Robert Abele
As a representative display of historical-but-reimagined players on well-worn ground, The Harder They Fall has undeniable pop, but as a movie needing character, narrative, and pacing beyond revitalized nostalgia, it’s all too often a bloody, showy mishmash that rarely holds its clichés and archetypes together with any lasting resonance.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 6, 2021
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Yolanda Machado
Building on 2019’s solidly entertaining animated entry, The Addams Family 2 remains kooky and fun, yet it lacks the warmth from the previous film and feels more juvenile, too.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 1, 2021
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William Bibbiani
Venom: Let There Be Carnage is a bold and brisk superhero story, unlike any other mainstream Hollywood film in the genre. It crams a heck of a lot of movie into an hour and a half, but it doesn’t feel like it needed to be longer. It just feels like we need more movies like it.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 30, 2021
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Jason Solomons
No Time to Die will be remembered for its emotional impact above all. And, to cap it all, Craig may well have delivered the most complex and layered Bond performance of them all.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 28, 2021
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Dave White
Content with dipping its toe into a social issue without risking much, what’s most revealing in The Jesus Music is what’s left out.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 27, 2021
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Alonso Duralde
The rom-com veneer acts as the sugar that lets the film’s more serious medicine go down, and Schrader understands this territory well.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 24, 2021
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William Bibbiani
Surge captures the protagonist’s collapse but shies away from catharsis, judgment, or context. Karia’s film lives in the moment and no matter how overwhelming it may seem, the moment is fleeting.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 24, 2021
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Robert Abele
If there’s a quibble with this graphically imagined The Tragedy of Macbeth, it’s one common to the movies Coen made with his brother: It’s ruthless, intelligent, and entertaining, and mightily drinkable as filmmaking, without necessarily raising the emotional temperature past a clinical, grim efficiency. Often, even with the never-not-human Washington going for it, dazzlingly so.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 24, 2021
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Dan Callahan
The new characters are all one-dimensional, and we learn nothing new about the old characters from the series.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 21, 2021
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Ben Croll
Amirpour takes on the Big Easy, mixing a heady cocktail of EDM beats, Hollywood treacle and southern sleaze and sipping down Bourbon Street.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 18, 2021
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Robert Abele
In the aggregate, Karam’s directing is so meticulously composed about conveying the density of what’s unsaid, and the mood around the people instead of the people creating the mood, that “The Humans” can feel a bit suffocating.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 18, 2021
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Alonso Duralde
It’s all too rare that audiences are treated to a big-screen examination of a woman’s inner turmoil, let alone a woman in the grandmotherly phase of her life; this one pops with both acrid wit and meaningful drama.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 18, 2021
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William Bibbiani
Inu-Oh may get messy with its plotting, but that never dulls its impact. It’s a siren scream of a musical: angry and beautiful, rapturously animated and highly infectious.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 18, 2021
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Dan Callahan
Lifshitz envelops Sasha and her family in a sort of visual cocoon, as if to cradle them, shooting them in gentle afternoon light when they’re outside and in protective shadows when they are inside their house. His touch here is so delicate that it makes most American talking-heads documentaries look particularly crude and formulaic by comparison.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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Ben Croll
Co-directors Gastón Duprat and Mariano Cohn would rather offer viewers a no-concept, light and breezy big-screen hangout, betting that audiences will turn out to watch a pair of beloved celebs cut loose, and that the actors’ megawatt charisma will be enough to carry the show. At least for a certain amount of time, the bet pays off.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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Steve Pond
The Western is a genre weighted down with dark history, and Henry is a man in the same position, haunted to a degree that Nelson makes transfixing.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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Steve Pond
It’s a very entertaining trip, but it doesn’t really go anywhere: If you go in loving Kenny G you’ll come out that way, and if you go in hating him you won’t change your mind.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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Ronda Racha Penrice
What unfolds is a bone-chilling account of what is widely regarded as the largest prison rebellion in U.S. history.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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Elizabeth Weitzman
“Becoming Cousteau” could have used a little more focus on his earthly experiences.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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Steve Pond
The Survivor needs to be an unpleasant movie to watch, because you don’t want to simply use Nazi atrocities to advance the plot. So Levinson doles them out, makes them shock and then ties them into the postwar Haft standing in a ring and enduring merciless beatings.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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Steve Pond
Dark and unsettling, The Forgiven doesn’t ask us to like its characters, but it forces us to watch as privilege begins to shatter and people for whom everything feels inconsequential have to deal with consequences.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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Ronda Racha Penrice
My Name Is Pauli Murray more than rests its case on Murray’s brilliance and important contributions.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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Robert Abele
Wife of a Spy doesn’t necessarily change its tone when the stakes are raised so much as shift its concerns from what’s on the surface to what courses underneath in a time of war.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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Robert Abele
At its best — when the flow of voices, archival clips (co-director Pollard being a master at the textural impact of found footage), and nicely blended-in recreations made to look archival, is thematically strongest — "Citizen Ashe" becomes a documentary about how experience becomes voice becomes action.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 16, 2021
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William Bibbiani
At the end of the day, “DASHCAM” actually doesn’t seem to have much of a point to make. It’s a mean little joke of a horror movie, one where the worst people seem to live longest and endure no consequences, and if that’s what “DASHCAM” has to say about life itself then fair enough, but it’s not presented with cleverness or pointed satire. Savage’s film just keeps digging a hole and somehow it never reaches any depth.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 16, 2021
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Monica Castillo
King Richard may be a fairly straightforward biopic, but it’s an enjoyable one, giving viewers the chance to enjoy a heartwarming if not uncomplicated story, talk about parenting and the stresses the many characters faced on their way to the history books- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 16, 2021
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Robert Abele
A road movie that, considering who made it, starts pretty far down that road, Cry Macho is familiar and loose, sometimes rattly, occasionally wince-inducing, and in a few moments genuine in ways no one else seems to know how to do anymore.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 15, 2021
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Steve Pond
It’s messy at times and melodramatic at others, and its treatment of mental health issues is not the most nuanced, but those feel like quibbles given the joy you can find in its best moments.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 14, 2021
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