Vanity Fair's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 643 reviews, this publication has graded:
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52% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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46% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 68
| Highest review score: | Under the Skin | |
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| Lowest review score: | Bright |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 429 out of 643
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Mixed: 171 out of 643
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Negative: 43 out of 643
643
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
The Lost City has the bad tang of squandered potential, misusing its massively appealing stars and failing the possibility of its premise.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 23, 2022
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
There’s no other way to put this: Deadpool 2 is a regular, shmegular superhero movie, distinguished only by an obnoxiously unearned dose of “see what I did there?!” It’s a drag.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 15, 2018
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
The Little Things is somehow both lazy and overly adorned, a lugubrious movie that spends all its indulgence on the easiest, most obvious of tropes.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 26, 2021
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Cassie da Costa
From visuals to music choice, there’s a lack of style here that is only further emphasized by the film’s refusal to focus.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 3, 2021
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
A movie like this—about such a fiery, singular person—should not play like mere misty elegy, a brief recounting of happy memories and sad ones that amounts to a sentimental sketch of an artist. Where is the whir of the world as Winehouse saw it, the matrix of pleasure and heartbreak that so fascinated her? Where is the Winehouse who, in the full glare of her being, ought to be remembered?- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 15, 2024
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Richard Lawson
Shyamalan can’t settle on a tone; he turns the comedy and tension and drama knobs seemingly at random. Trap is jumble of moods and textures that never cohere into the taught little thriller that the trailers advertise. The film is instead paunchy and meandering, a slog of pat psychology and limp cultural analysis.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 2, 2024
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Richard Lawson
Your Place or Mine occasionally gives off a glimmer of something interesting, but all too quickly snaps back to the featureless drudgery that has, sadly, come to define its genre.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 10, 2023
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K. Austin Collins
Jojo Rabbit has little to say about any of the things it dredges up, beyond the obvious.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 10, 2019
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Richard Lawson
Polley admirably allows her fine performers ample space to bring Women Talking to life. But there are also the bigger needs of the film to be considered—sometimes Polley’s actorly generosity comes at a cost, when the film turns stage-y for a minute and we’re snapped out of its enveloping spell.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 9, 2022
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- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 8, 2018
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Cruella is yet another act of co-opting by the biggest entertainment company in the world, an attempt to graft a cheap rebel spirit onto a naked exercise in I.P. synergy.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 26, 2021
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
The film may have just been a failed stab at inter-gender empathy, were it not for its wretched final act. This is where Men takes an abrupt turn into surreal horror, and when something bad starts glinting just beneath the surface of Garland’s apparent motivations.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 9, 2022
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Richard Lawson
The movie feels too late and too little, a minor work that’s perhaps too streamlined to be really messy, but nonetheless has an air of shambling inexactness.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 4, 2019
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Richard Lawson
Technically speaking, Dolittle is a film made for children. So we should probably mostly view it through that lens. In that regard, the movie is perfectly okay.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 16, 2020
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Iñárritu has a lot on his mind here, weighing the sins and graces of personal and public history, and attempting to atone for some of it. But as Bardo stretches on and on and on, the film narrows into something solipsistic and meta.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 1, 2022
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Richard Lawson
An action-drama sourced from history (while riffing considerably on that history), The Woman King is a sturdy testament to how renewed a staid form can feel when it’s stretched to include different narratives.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 10, 2022
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K. Austin Collins
Washington...absolutely has a keen sense of his character. It’s there in every skeptical cock of his head, every sly, knowing grimace. But The Equalizer 2 is too much of a dull slog for any of that to pop with Washington’s usual ace charisma. The movie is a bog; Washington’s merely wading through it.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 18, 2018
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Richard Lawson
DuVernay can’t seem to settle on a consistent visual or narrative cadence. Her camera is all over the place, hurtling in for woozy close-ups and then rearing back to reveal what is meant to be vast splendor but is often just bland C.G.I. prettiness.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 8, 2018
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Richard Lawson
Judas and the Black Messiah is missing that deeper personal aspect, some sense of the emotional force yoking O’Neal and Hampton together, dragging them toward ruin. The film is resonant regardless. Still, there’s such an opportunity presented here—to see these two sterling actors really working in harmony—that goes frustratingly unseized. As is, Judas and the Black Messiah is richer and more engaging than a standard biopic, but is not quite the Shakespearean tragedy of double allegiances and backstabbing that it could have been.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 4, 2021
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Richard Lawson
Rising to challenge viewers’ qualms about the movie’s existence is Deadwyler, whose stirring performance may be reason enough to see the film.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 1, 2022
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Richard Lawson
It’s an ugly stray who smells bad and should not be invited into your home, certainly. And yet it is its own kind of living creature, worthy of at least some basic compassion.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 18, 2019
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Richard Lawson
With Dune, Villeneuve has the chance to right the wrongs of David Lynch’s 1984 misfire (a misfire according to some, anyway) and truly honor Herbert’s text. But Villenueve can’t help but lacquer it all up into something hyper polished and hard to the touch.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
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Richard Lawson
Babylon is unfocussed and overeager, continuously distracted by the burst of a new idea. That could be read as an apt rendering of the manic thought of a cocaine binge, but there is something awfully studied in how Chazelle conjures up that nose-scratching, high-speed verve.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 16, 2022
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Richard Lawson
Let There Be Carnage tries to recreate the first film’s giddy shock while also upping the ante, taking what audiences liked and slopping more of that onto their plates.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 30, 2021
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
What they’ve visually pulled off in Lightyear is stunning stuff. The story, sadly, does not rise up to meet that work.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 17, 2022
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Cassie da Costa
There’s no shame in a remake where the re-rendering is genuinely fresh—but del Toro’s take empties its source material of significance, taking us for a gimmicky ride.a, who are too complex for their underwritten characters.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 18, 2021
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K. Austin Collins
Climax feels like what happens when a provocateur grows up. Noé, a nominally outré festival regular three decades into his career, is unmistakably washed. The jig is up, as of Climax, if not even earlier.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 20, 2019
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Jungle Cruise is a two-hour movie that has far less consequence than a ride that’s a small fraction of that length. The experience the film more accurately simulates is the standing in line: all that tedious waiting in the heat for the fun to start.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 29, 2021
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Richard Lawson
Book Club’s four stars—and others like them—deserve material that’s specific, clever, surprising in some way. These plug-and-play movies have lost much of their charm at this point, feeling more like a slightly degrading duty than any kind of demographic triumph. Which may be overthinking it. But shouldn’t a movie about a book club feel at least a little bit literate?- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 17, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Mortal Kombat is a disjointed, halfhearted trip to the past, where things probably should have been left finished for good.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 23, 2021
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