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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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
The stylistic conceit of keeping us entirely with the clones (so that we are as ill-informed as they are and never get to meet their powerful oppressors) only reveals what an empty-headed abstraction this tale was from both page and frame one- Time Out
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Common wisdom suggests bakers are sour because they reserve the sweetness for their work. But these competitors' kindness in the face of adversity-at one point, a well-established chef breaks down in tears while his colleagues comfort him-is what sticks with you the most.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf
Is Joaquin Phoenix putting us on? After watching the terrifying, near-brilliant exposé I'm Still Here, in which the Oscar nominee's public and private unraveling becomes a sick joke, the question doesn't matter.- Time Out
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David Fear
The only thing that remains a mystery is why anyone thinks they can pass off a poorly made, predictable-to-a-fault movie as inspiring entertainment.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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Reviewed by
David Fear
A worthwhile portrait of a genius who made beautiful music, and a case study for how to tragically, epically self-destruct.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
David Fear
This being a François Ozon film, there's beaucoup simmering sexual tension, as well as the prolific French director's usual thematic preoccupations: death and grief, familial animosity and female awakening.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf
Here's a film that definitely wants to play Hollywood dress-up.- Time Out
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Keith Uhlich
Gould is as much of a mystery at the end as at the beginning. You get the feeling that's the way he'd have wanted it.- Time Out
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Stephen Garrett
There are riveting moments, especially in tastefully shot interviews with former captives, who quietly describe their physical and psychological torture.- Time Out
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S. James Snyder
Alexei Kaleina and Craig Macneill's proudly minimalist affair favors ambiguity over soap-operatics, evoking the inescapable heartache of a loss so great, it cannot be uttered.- Time Out
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David Fear
The movie will make you tap your toes; don't expect much for your head or your heartstrings.- Time Out
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Nick Schager
It's Gruber's own remembrances (and a wealth of accompanying archival photos and film footage) that best mark her life as a case study in pioneering feminist courage, ambition and individualism.- Time Out
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While the film's interviews with students, parents and educators tend toward the repetitious, the hammering of the same bullet-point ideas time and again only lends greater urgency to this exposé of an increasingly rotten system.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
Anderson makes often-inspiring use of the 3-D effects.- Time Out
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Eric Hynes
The Virginity Hit is elevated by its cast of very funny young actors who match good comic timing with relaxed spontaneity.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Just because you tart up a typical romantic comedy with trash talk doesn't make it edgy or real.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
This is the kind of movie in which it's considered the zenith of meta-wit to have a slumming Robert De Niro (as Machete's racist politico nemesis) drive a taxi.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
Taken on its own fun-over-philosophy terms, this is an exercise in tone-shifting virtuosity.- Time Out
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David Fear
The attention to visuals is above and beyond what most vérité is capable of; doing double duty as the film's cinematographer, Fan demonstrates a pitch-perfect photojournalistic eye.- Time Out
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Eric Hynes
The girls are worth rooting for, but their pursuit is secondary to one sorry-ass dude's redemption. That's a win?- Time Out
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Joshua Rothkopf
Simply skip the first part entirely: "Killer Instinct" bulges with a disconnected jumble of nightclub attacks and fence-clipping escapes you've seen better elsewhere. Yet a tide change happens with the superior Public Enemy No. 1, which takes the subject's raging ego as its cue.- Time Out
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There's one crucial lesson that Baker hasn't absorbed, however: Don't get too caught up in plotting, especially when it involves a man warming to an unwanted child.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Nick Schager
Despite the subtitles, it's basically a slice of formulaic Hollywood-style mythmaking, writ large and woefully empty.- Time Out
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Joshua Rothkopf
The film's mood is so somber and minimal, it might be confused for deep. Had the plot (meager and one-last-job-predictable) zipped along, that wouldn't feel like such a problem.- Time Out
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Joshua Rothkopf
A smart horror film will fatten its pigs before the slaughter, and the mock doc The Last Exorcism feeds its prize hog nicely.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
It's prime B-movie material put through the Ridley Scott Cuisinart.- Time Out
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Joshua Rothkopf
This disappointing dramatization, mounted with generic blandness by Jean-François Richet, makes no case for the man's larger significance, nor does any emotional digging at all. Such detachment was no doubt considered artistically shrewd-it's a big mistake.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
Notwithstanding Brown's occasional half-baked critical comment about the sport's corporatization, the film ends up as a cliquish circle jerk that flatters those in the know and leaves neophytes little to mull over.- Time Out
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