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
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- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
The film has a thesis: hitmen must have psychopathy on their CVs; but even bad guys have souls. It's Roth's tough job to illustrate this, which, in his finest performance to date, he does magnificently.- Time Out
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The film impresses for its authenticity, careful delineation of mood, and subtle balancing of the personal and political. Téchiné wins sterling support from his young cast, who give the kind of quiet, naturalistic performances the French are so good at. A delicacy to savour.- Time Out
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Generous souls may try to blame this travesty of the Deadline comic-strip on the studio execs who forced director Talalay to tone down and re-edit her cut. But what remains of Petty's anodyne sexless heroine and the dull, episodic live-action sequences suggests we may have been spared something worse even than this movie.- Time Out
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Fascinating, and without the pretensions that have marred some of Egoyan's earlier work.- Time Out
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Candyman was the best Clive Barker adaptation to date. This follow-up is a travesty of both its literary source and the original film.- Time Out
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A gritty human drama evoking the residual vibrancy of a threatened culture.- Time Out
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Director Thomas (once Sgt Lucy Bates of Hill Street Blues) has recreated '70s sitcom-land with the kind of unerring attention to detail Merchant-Ivory lavish on a society ball, and she's drawn hilariously synthetic performances from a shrewdly cloned cast.- Time Out
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Connery and Fishburne are adversarial along Heat of the Night lines, but director Glimcher makes little of the small-town Deep South locations. Pity.- Time Out
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Lambert is as uncharismatic as ever, while Van Peebles is as frightening as a wrestler in mock angry mood, and just as ridiculous. To Morahan's credit, however, he smoothly continues the series' tradition of flashy images, showy sfx, aerial landscape shots and driving rock tunes.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Geoff Andrew
As social critique, the film provokes pity and anger, not thought: understandable, since it's never quite clear exactly what Loach is attacking.- Time Out
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This elegant adaptation by Alan Bennett of his own stage success is the best of his contributions to the big screen to date: sturdily performed and persuasively detailed, and with a beady delight in political in-fighting.- Time Out
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Scott Lee is an unexpectedly appealing hero, partly because he's never indulged, and his dialogue is kept to a minimum.- Time Out
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This metaphor-movie is both touching and tasteful. It allows Foster to play scared and alone, traumatised and neurotic, and, most importantly, free and inspirational.- Time Out
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Julia (in his final role) hams it up shamelessly as the camp commandant, but not even his suave presence and throwaway quips can save this noisy, brainless mess.- Time Out
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It's an odd plot-potty, frenetic movie, shot at some snow-blown Canadian location with irrelevant panache. Cage looks cold most of the time, and has retractable stubble. The rest of the cast look like they're waiting for summer.- Time Out
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Jackson's film is distinguished by the intensity of the girls' secretive relationship. If the busy camera movements used to convey the heady exhilaration of their early encounters are irritating, the sense of claustrophobic immersion in private mysteries is palpable. Acted with conviction, and directed and written with febrile vibrancy.- Time Out
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Impossibly exotic and glossy, its emotional dynamics make no sense today, so that all we're left with is a trite celebration of Warren and Annette as lovers made for each other.- Time Out
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Skilfully blending fairy-tale clarity with the skewed logic of nightmares, Craven also blurs the boundary between reality and fiction. There is creepy subversive stuff going on here, not to mention sly sideswipes at the censors.- Time Out
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Bacon scores strongly, but it is Streep's beautifully natural, unshowy performance which keeps the film on course, even when the machinations of the plot become very rocky indeed.- Time Out
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Reviewed by
Geoff Andrew
Relaxed and leisurely, it's an effortless blend of documentary and fiction, part road movie, part sociological satire, part polemical reminiscence.- Time Out
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A brave stab, nevertheless, with a finely executed finale as Peter sets about his ironic salvation.- Time Out
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Redford has fashioned (from Paul Attanasio's brilliant screenplay) an impeccably nuanced Faustian drama which aspires to capture America's fall from grace: that point at the end of the '50s when the country first lost faith in itself.- Time Out
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Screenwriter Boyd has turned his laugh-out-loud novel into a groan-out-loud movie.- Time Out
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A curate's egg with more than its share of longueurs, but its comically surreal viewpoint is infectious.- Time Out
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Yakin never settles for the easy, last-minute moralising and macho posturing that has afflicted much of the otherwise intriguing new black cinema; here, story and character take priority, helped no end by Nelson's quiet, riveting central performance.- Time Out
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