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 | |
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| 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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- Critic Score
The film and its young cast exude a charismatic irreverence, yet a hazy, perfunctory mood dulls the playful proceedings.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf
Too many digital effects ruin the spell of a tactile world of evil objects scheming your demise. But even a mediocre FD is better than more Jigsaw.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
S. James Snyder
These ragtag rebels exude an infectious determination, and while director Dan Stone fails in the adrenaline department, he succeeds in bringing home a memorable portrait of resilience.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Unlike "The Wrestler," which Siegel scripted, Big Fan has a way of making a socially marginal figure seem oddly charismatic without stacking the sympathy deck.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
The doc’s breakout star is Vogue creative director Grace Coddington, a former model whose plain appearance (the end result of a horrible car accident) and frumpy clothing belie her genius for fashion. She counters her boss every chance she can get and provides the film with a much-needed emotional center.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Would be fascinating by virtue of its subject alone. But the filmmaker wisely emphasizes how Harris also represents something bigger; this isn’t just the story of one man but also the dawning of the virtual über alles age and the death of privacy.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Stephen Garrett
Despite a plucky soundtrack and frantic editing, the movie shows otherwise wan interest in the gaggle of faux-transgressive bad girls who bare their dulled claws at England’s establishment ethos, as though that notion alone were somehow fresh and cheeky.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Stephen Garrett
Cloud 9's plot is thin, the conflict lazy, and the resolution sudden and unsurprising. That's a shame, because stronger development in the story department might have made this film a minor sensation.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
Zombie is still committed to showing how violence perverts all touched by it, yet his carnivalesque approach undercuts his empathy. He panders to the cheap seats whenever he’s not being scary.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
Lee and Schamus make history blandly palatable; in the process, they rob the times and the people they’re portraying of their complications.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
Props should be given to Rodriguez’s breathless “let’s put on a show” inventiveness. Plus, Macy and the booger--kick ass!- Time Out
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S. James Snyder
Timing’s everything in comedy, so perhaps Post Grad would have seemed peppier prior to the Great Recession; circa now, this comedy feels like a cynical stroll through the unemployment lines awaiting today’s class of seniors.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
Spelling may not be Quentin Tarantino’s forte, but his grasp of language (both verbal and visual) is peerless.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
By the end of Pray’s skin-deep love letter, only one sweeping reaction seems appropriate: “A pox on all your houses.”- Time Out
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Reviewed by
David Fear
This isn’t revisionist history; it’s a key moment in political radicalism reduced to an empty pop-cultural posture.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Kari Skogland’s flashy yet dead-on-arrival drama turns Belfast’s backstreet battlefields into music-video backgrounds.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
David Fear
When violence eventually rears its ugly head again, the effect is as anticlimactic as the movie’s title is misleading. Brief bliss is a red herring; there’s only a lifetime of pain left in such acts’ wakes.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Karina Longworth
If any star’s life should lend itself to a grade-A guilty-pleasure biopic, its Hamilton’s, but My One and Only dodges the dirty details.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Stephen Garrett
Rousing, devastating, invigorating, painful, joyful, soulful--all those adjectives don’t even begin to describe Passing Strange, but it’s a start.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf
Though wildly uneven, the film sometimes comes within screaming distance of the sick ironies of "Heathers." That's how loudly Goldthwait still knows how to yell.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
David Fear
There’s something admirable about the anything-goes energy that Van Peebles brings to this tall tale, but the amateurishness and Video Toaster–era technical tricks start to grate after a bit. It’s a funky, free-form fairy tale, but one that only a mutha could truly love.- Time Out
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- Critic Score
Dime-store philosophy, coupled with the running commentary from the Games’ heinously Spicoli-esque announcers (“Dude, that was the hardest slam we’ve ever seen!”), ruins an otherwise gripping, in-your-face experience.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Monika Fabian
In using the urban poor and the queer community as punch lines, Casi Divas ultimately succumbs to its own criticism.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
No simplistic status parable. It’s more a psychological snapshot of a person forever doomed to remain a voyeur to her own life- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Nicolas Rapold
The escapades are tossed off and fall flat, all products of the business-as-usual template created by the film’s producers, Adam McKay and Will Ferrell.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Stephen Garrett
Lamely tries to update "Breakfast at Tiffany’s" for the Twitter set. Too bad Truman Capote’s not around for rewrites.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
S. James Snyder
Though Aron Gaudet’s documentary never quite captures the relieved atmosphere of these homecomings, it does acknowledge the dark side of a cheery platitude: those on both sides of the divide are in need of healing.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
The ideologies underlying Andersson’s oft-astonishing succession of extreme wide-angle, vanishing-point tableaux are a decidedly acquired taste.- Time Out
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