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
A New Era really, really should be the end of Downton Abbey, but I’d happily watch these freaks stumbling through the 1930s if they were so inclined to let me.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 20, 2022
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Richard Lawson
Armageddon Time is a damning moral drama that is in thoughtful dialogue with complex matters of race and class.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 19, 2022
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Richard Lawson
Had Tom Cruise not been in the cockpit, I suspect very little of that emotional component would be so effective. Maverick—loud and dumb and occasionally thrilling—is an act of arrogance, sure, a veteran movie star happily strutting onto the stage so lovingly set for him. (And which he helped design.) But that proves to be a clever reflection of the character he’s playing.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 12, 2022
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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 film somehow gets more interesting as it goes, swirling up into a climax that is mordant and corny and monster-movie fantastical.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 4, 2022
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Richard Lawson
Perhaps a new day of Cage has dawned. One in which he can get back to the business of acting, unburdened by all the constant, semi-loving demand that he just bug out his eyes and dance.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 29, 2022
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Richard Lawson
Eggers’s action sequences are swift and brutal, filled with the crunch of life extinguished and tossed into the bone pile of time. Skarsgård, hulking and seething, is a fine vessel for the film’s opulent menace. He’s a fearsome, yet elegant, creature of destruction as he hacks and slashes away.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 22, 2022
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Richard Lawson
Rather than weak imitation, You Won’t Be Alone is a bold and compelling—and reverent—repurposing of Malick’s technique, turning its gaze on matters more squishy, profane, and fallibly human than Malick’s high-minded considerations of the divine.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 8, 2022
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Richard Lawson
There is a chance that much more of Aline is played for comedy than I realize; perhaps the jolts of revulsion and fascination are meant to resolve into a giddy laugh. But the film doesn’t really wink to let us in on the joke, except perhaps for one scene that puts a full, slo-mo view on the results of this experiment.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 8, 2022
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Richard Lawson
Ambulance is a visual ordeal, but deliberately so. Bay wants us to feel the exhausted tension of his characters- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 7, 2022
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Richard Lawson
The curious fun of Daniel Espinosa’s film is in how it embraces the gothic mythology that inspired it. Morbius does eventually become a cluttered slugfest, as all things must. But for much of its run it is a stylish, intriguingly toned story of a man trying to thwart mortality.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 30, 2022
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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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Richard Lawson
The reality is that there is probably nothing truly novel to be done with Batman at this point. He’s been thoroughly mined for both fun and pathos; try as Reeves and his co-screenwriter Peter Craig might, they can’t squeeze much higher-meaning blood out of a fatally depleted stone. Pattinson, moody and saturnine, does what he can, but he’s not afforded much beyond growling and scowling.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 28, 2022
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Cassie da Costa
That Decker is able to transmit a deep and compelling curiosity about this journey through each and every image is reason enough to follow a deeply familiar and sometimes overearnest plot.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 23, 2022
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Richard Lawson
Christie’s cool flint is swapped out for tearful ruminations on lost love in Death on the Nile, an intermittently entertaining but otherwise tiresomely lugubrious trip down crocodile-filled waters.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 7, 2022
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Cassie da Costa
The language of the film is found not in the thoughtfully restrained dialogue Ishiguro has written—which accurately reflects the collective repression of polite British society—but in the images Hermanus, cinematographer Jamie Ramsay, and editor Chris Wyatt have constructed, in collaboration with production designer Helen Scott and costume designer Sandy Powell.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 3, 2022
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Cassie da Costa
Sharp Stick is deeply personal; a series of constellation-like animations that arise in Sarah Jo’s mind as she has sex serve as a reminder of those resonances. Like any artist worth her salt, Dunham yields to the farthest corners of her imagination and experience—backlash be damned.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 3, 2022
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Richard Lawson
Moonfall is all cobbled together financing and bad green screen, simulated locations weakly standing in for the real thing and a host of capable but wasted actors. What an accidental irony, that Moonfall should, after all that, prove so weightless.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 3, 2022
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Richard Lawson
The film looks pallid and cheap, with pretty much zero nod to the style and panache of Wes Craven’s original. The jokes are heavily telegraphed as Clever Jokes, the references to cinema culture and film structure landing as obligation rather than organic bursts of analytical wit.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 12, 2022
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Cassie da Costa
Ali, in his first lead role, is let down with a hollow script and sanitized surroundings that his character barely struggles against.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 27, 2021
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Reviewed by
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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Richard Lawson
What I will say is that director Jon Watts handles this grand convergence of properties old and current with enough verve to almost sustain the long run of the film. But there’s so much brand Frankensteining to be done that there’s really no time for quirk and texture; much of the bounce and sparkle of the past two Holland films is lost.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 13, 2021
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Cassie da Costa
Being the Ricardos reduces the physical comedy that made I Love Lucy work night after night to a series of explainers. Speech after speech drills into the workings of a comedy script or gag, yet nothing makes you laugh.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 10, 2021
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Richard Lawson
Where Don’t Look Up finds its strength is in its lead performances, which can’t be undone even by the film’s exhausting, rapid-fire editing and McKay’s aggressive indicating toward his own punchlines.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 9, 2021
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Cassie da Costa
What’s most arresting about Flee isn’t its animated sequences, but Rasmussen’s detailed and attentive recording of Amin’s vocal expressions. However conversant he is in several languages, from Dari to Russian to Danish, Amin has a way of letting silence interrupt.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 8, 2021
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Richard Lawson
This new take on the material is more sinewy and sensual. It balances the property’s inherent melodrama with added grit, but not so much extra scuzz that it feels like an overly modern provocation.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 2, 2021
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Richard Lawson
There’s some art to be found here, for sure. But there’s not nearly enough of the pop.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 24, 2021
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Richard Lawson
Red Notice is limp and dull, and does more to showcase the shortcomings of each of its marquee idols than it does to highlight their bankable charisma. A globe-trotting heist film that heavily relies on zippy banter, Red Notice never finds its groove, instead jerking around between familiar action sequences and humor that never lands.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 19, 2021
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Cassie da Costa
Much of what you see in Passing you’ll miss if you don’t really pay attention. This is, obviously, the entire idea. No matter the language we use or the identities we are assigned or take on, race is not material or fixed—it transforms and distorts.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 19, 2021
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Richard Lawson
It’s a lively, messy coming-of-age story which turns the clashing elements of its title into reflections of a certain youthful folly and daring, a penchant for base gross-out humor and big, revolutionary thinking.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 15, 2021
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