Time Out's Scores
- Movies
For 6,371 reviews, this publication has graded:
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41% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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56% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3.4 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 61
| Highest review score: | Pain and Glory | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Surf Nazis Must Die |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,474 out of 6371
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Mixed: 3,422 out of 6371
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Negative: 475 out of 6371
6371
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
The film's commitment to representing the harsh truths of an unfortunate historical moment is admirable, but it tends to grate rather than illuminate.- Time Out
- Posted May 24, 2011
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf
Director Radu Muntean has pulled off the near-impossible, turning each scene (captured in capacious long takes) into arias of generosity for his actors.- Time Out
- Posted May 24, 2011
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- Time Out
- Posted May 24, 2011
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
For an animation studio that too often specializes in the frivolous and glib (begone, Shrek series!), the move to the dark side is refreshing.- Time Out
- Posted May 24, 2011
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf
The unexpectedly wonderful thing about this sequel is that it actually improves on the jokes.- Time Out
- Posted May 24, 2011
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Reviewed by
Eric Hynes
What Lost Bohemia lacks in aesthetic presentation - first-time filmmaker Astor seems to have gathered footage without much forethought - is made up for by an intimacy familiar from home movies, revealing eccentric neighbors at their most frank and endearing.- Time Out
- Posted May 17, 2011
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David Fear
Whistle-blowing works best without gratuitous pop-doc debris, but there are only so many dry, fact-heavy testimonies from engineers you can take before a certain dullness uneasily settles in.- Time Out
- Posted May 17, 2011
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
This is prime Woody Allen - insightful, philosophical and very funny.- Time Out
- Posted May 17, 2011
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David Fear
Performances barely meet a junior-collegiate theater-troupe level, the narration hits maxi-fromage heights, and just when you think it can't get any more derivative, out comes a glowing suitcase à la "Pulp Fiction." Rock bottom has now been firmly established.- Time Out
- Posted May 17, 2011
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
The kids pick up the filmmakers' lyrical slack more often than not, but this ode to the power of verse could really use a redraft.- Time Out
- Posted May 17, 2011
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Joshua Rothkopf
The new movie is simpler plotwise (a race to the Fountain of Youth), while at the same time being somehow more deadening.- Time Out
- Posted May 17, 2011
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Eric Hynes
First-time director J. Clay Tweel oversells the importance of both the Vegas event and of magic in general-you'd think he were filming a spiritual movement rather than hidden-ball tricks. His wide-eyed subjects do make magic happen-but that has less to do with illusion than innocence.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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Nick Schager
Director Leanne Pooley's documentary on the sisters and their "anarchist variety act" is definitely a formulaic bit of portraiture, but given its engaging, pioneering subjects, gimmickry is hardly needed to spice things up.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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David Fear
Whereas Yuen's speciality has always been gonzo, gravity-defying spectacles, now he's spiced his set pieces with plasticine computer-generated flourishes-effectively puncturing the inventive, handmade charm and fluid flurries of artistry that made his classic fight scenes so thrilling.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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Joshua Rothkopf
Dedicating a movie to John Hughes doesn't equal capturing the master's ear for the universality of adolescent angst.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
As engrossing as it is maddening, Pierre Thoretton's documentary on the sale of Yves Saint Laurent's extensive art collection is perched somewhere between a sanded-edged official portrait and a keen examination of affluence run amok.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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- Critic Score
While his film is engaging enough when covering curiosities like a funeral directors' convention, the fact that it lacks an authorial voice of its own is a dealbreaker.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Famous fans (Rosanne Cash! Oprah!!!) attest to the book and film's greatness, but at best, this is a half-hour A&E Biography episode padded out to feature-length with forgetful trivia, frustratingly facile history lessons and far too much fawning.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
That T.J. and his family willingly allow this headbanging psycho(analyst) to move into their cluttered, dankly lit abode-the emotional damage is palpable, yo!-is just one of the film's many eyebrow-raising contrivances.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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Brings nothing new to the coming-of-age dance film. Worse, director Carmen Marron seems as bored with the movie's protagonist as we are.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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Reviewed by
Eric Hynes
A lot of history gets horned into this undeniably inspirational parable, though slick execution and simplistic storytelling make it a lesson suitable only for easily impressed elementary-school students.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
By the time Nick decides to have an emotionally purgative yard sale-the primary holdover from the short story-all the adult ambiguities have been traded in for facile Indiewood profundities.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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Joshua Rothkopf
Fantastical is what we get: Cameraman is filled with Cardiff's achingly beautiful work.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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Reviewed by
Nick Schager
Agent-turned-director Tony Krantz has a penchant for stylization that quickly slides into a velvet-painting cheesiness, which-along with the script's pseudoprofound Philosophy 101 maxims-renders the atmosphere less noirish than ridiculously cartoonish.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf
The movie skips along episodically; it's not quite as sharp as a war narrative needs to be, even if its nightmarish psychology feels spot-on.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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David Fear
Wiig comes out a winner, but nothing is worse than watching a perfect marriage of performer and material get so perversely undermined.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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David Fear
Once this cultural exploration devolves into just a forum for grating geek griping and Jar-Jar Binks hatred, however, you'll wish you could escape to a galaxy far, far away.- Time Out
- Posted May 4, 2011
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
Though it holds your attention all the way through to an enigmatic, spiritually tinged climax, the movie leaves you wanting more than the Vega Vidals' secondhand artistry is able to provide.- Time Out
- Posted May 4, 2011
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David Fear
You can easily see why Ichikawa's vision of the 20th-century Japanese-lit landmark is considered definitive; the way he elevates the story's soap-operatic elements to a level of extraordinary sublimity makes the melodramatic seem positively majestic.- Time Out
- Posted May 4, 2011
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David Fear
The film ham-fistedly hammers home its message more than the usual collateral-damage drama.- Time Out
- Posted May 4, 2011
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