USA Today's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 4,677 reviews, this publication has graded:
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61% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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36% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1 point lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 64
| Highest review score: | Fruitvale Station | |
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| Lowest review score: | Amos & Andrew |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,969 out of 4677
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Mixed: 1,022 out of 4677
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Negative: 686 out of 4677
4677
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Mike Clark
The longer the movie drones on, the queasier it gets. [6 June 1997, Life, p.3D]- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Mike Clark
This is a blueprint for mainstream moviegoing, but be forewarned that the finale is surprisingly down-and-dirty. In this case, though, the violence blisteringly redeems what has been a merely OK thriller. [8Nov1996 Pg.01.D]- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Susan Wloszczyna
Overlong, overdone and overwrought, the narratively challenged Set It Off gets off on exploitation shock and social-conscience schlock in equal measure. Yet it still manages to get it on entertainingly with a big assist from Latifah, blasting off the screen like human TNT, and Jada Pinkett (The Nutty Professor) in another firecracker performance. [06 Nov 1996]- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Mike Clark
Despite implied fidelity, we might as well be watching William Shakespeare's The Cable Guy. Yet the film's skewed stylistic flourishes capture enough of the original's spirit to provoke more respect than rejection. [01Nov1996, Pg. 01.D]- USA Today
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Susan Wloszczyna
Face it. Parody comedies are no longer a laughing matter. [25 October 1996, p.5D]- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Andy Seiler
Uneven, amateurish and borderline misogynistic. But it's also very funny, and it never loses its cool.- USA Today
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- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Mike Clark
The problem here isn't grimness but a failure to make grimness wrench the heart. [18 Oct 1996]- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Mike Clark
If the movie finally doesn't know when to quit, its flaws are those of enthusiasm and heart. The central character may be a bus, but the story is really saying, "walk a mile in my shoes." [16 Oct 1996]- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Mike Clark
The Chamber merits some respect for daring to be gloomy, for facing the capital punishment issue head-on and for the quality of Gene Hackman's performance. [11 October 1996, p.1D]- USA Today
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Mike Clark
It isn't an unabashed movie-movie like the chest-thumping "Braveheart" or a cool, clinical semi-documentary like "The Battle of Algiers". There are elements of both here and they just don't dance. [11 Oct 1996, Pg.03.D]- USA Today
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Mike Clark
The movie tries to juggle motherly love sentiment with wanna-be snappy ripostes with a violent streak that extends to threatening a grade-schooler with blinding and busted kneecaps. [11 Oct 1996, Pg.03.D]- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Susan Wloszczyna
Douglas prances and chants with crimson-haired tribesmen who look like they were styled by Dennis Rodman. He talks a good game. (Why does he kill? "Because I've got a gift.") But he is trapped by the same undernourished script as the rest of the cast. Secondary characters are fleshed out so little, they should simply wear labels that say "kitty snacks." [11 Oct 1996]- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Andy Seiler
Excitingly edited and evocatively scored, Microcosmos adapts big filmmaking techniques to tiny creatures. You get thrills, slapstick and even romance. [11 Nov 1996]- USA Today
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Mike Clark
Some caper movies build suspense, while others tweak the genre with tongue lancing cheek. But this lesbian caper pic (how's that for a rarefied subgenre?) often pulls off both feats in the same scene, even simultaneously. [04 Oct 1996 Pg.04.D]- USA Today
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Mike Clark
Thing's opening hour is fast-paced, though not fast enough to obscure the reality that "American Graffiti" and "Diner" had sharper writing and certainly more psychological depth. [04 Oct 1996, Pg.01.D]- USA Today
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Susan Wloszczyna
The Glimmer Man is strictly a bummer, man. [07 Oct 1996, p.3D]- USA Today
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Mike Clark
Blethyn is so astonishing that you forget you're seeing a performance.- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Susan Wloszczyna
Darkly comic 2 Days in the Valley is Tarantino lite and low-fat Altman. And that's not bad. It leaves you filled but without that bloated feeling. [27 Sept 1996]- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Mike Clark
A ludicrous medical thriller operating on the supposition that readers and moviegoers have forgotten about "Coma". [27 Sept 1996]- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Mike Clark
The First Wives Club has a femme casting coup for the ages, and sometimes it only takes the right performers interacting to give sprightly fluff indispensable showmanship. [20 Sep 1996 Pg.01.D]- USA Today
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Mike Clark
Obviously armed with more gangster-of-love opportunities playing Pablo Picasso than he had playing Richard Nixon, Anthony Hopkins ends up opting here for wit over full-blooded passion, but it proves to be enough. [23 Sep 1996]- USA Today
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Susan Wloszczyna
This is a noisy, sadistic and just plain dull rendering of a too-often-told tale about a mysterious drifter who rides into a lawless outpost and pits rival gangs against each other. The plot, based on Akira Kurosawa's samurai classic Yojimbo, isn't so much dusted off by writer/director Walter Hill (Wild Bill) as propped up. [20 Sep 1996]- USA Today
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Susan Wloszczyna
An untreacly family film is a true rare bird. [13 Sep 1996]- USA Today
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Mike Clark
Bulletproof is both offensive and depressing, from its sociopathic mix of graphic violence and slapstick to its severe career blighting of the once-formidable Ernest Dickerson. [6 Sept 1996, p.3D]- USA Today
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Reviewed by
Susan Wloszczyna
Delivers diverting comic fluff for the bland clan's fans. [23 Aug 1996, p.8D]- USA Today
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Mike Clark
Credit McGlone for humanizing and even making funny one of the most insufferable big-screen boors in recent memory. Cheating on his wife, doing what he can to undermine his older brother's already rocky marriage, McGlone is setting himself up for a fall. Burns' lower-key acting style makes him a cool straight man during their frequent bandyings, into which dad Mahoney (also abandoned by his wife) always adds his own two cents. You probably have to love a guy who claims that his failure to believe in God isn't enough to keep him from being a good Catholic. [23 Aug 1996]- USA Today
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Mike Clark
The movie keeps switching focus without ever getting its bearings, and when Brando exits earlier than expected, there's little but mayhem to fall back on. Moreau and mayhem are synonymous, to be sure, but we already know this going in. [23 Aug 1996]- USA Today
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