For 17,760 reviews, this publication has graded:
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52% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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44% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 63
| Highest review score: | IMAX: Hubble 3D | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Divorce: The Musical |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 9,121 out of 17760
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Mixed: 7,003 out of 17760
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Negative: 1,636 out of 17760
17760
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Amy Nicholson
Scare Me would work even better onstage. On screen, it feels like an experiment in minimalism. The film is heavy-handed only in Fred’s fear of emasculation and Fanny’s digs at “desperate white dudes,” troweled on for socially relevant heft.- Variety
- Posted Feb 3, 2020
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Andrew Barker
There’s something quite comforting in seeing her (Austen) work returned to a more natural habitat: adapted into handsome, clever, faithfully unambitious films like Autumn de Wilde’s Emma.- Variety
- Posted Feb 3, 2020
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
The ironically inviting title only hints at part of the story in this wholly devastating documentary: The crisis, it turns out, is all around us.- Variety
- Posted Feb 2, 2020
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Reviewed by
Amy Nicholson
Almereyda lays tracks to take Tesla in a dozen wild directions. . . . Yet, having ordered the audience onboard, Almereyda doesn’t go anywhere with the gambit.- Variety
- Posted Feb 2, 2020
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
The film is acted with great flair and emotional precision, and it’s been staged by Taymor with vividly detailed historical flavor, yet it tells Steinem’s story in a way that’s more wide than deep.- Variety
- Posted Feb 2, 2020
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Peter Debruge
Nine Days is that rare work of art that invites you to re-consider your entire worldview.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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Reviewed by
Amy Nicholson
As a ballad about a rock star’s soul, The Nowhere Inn is a fun riff performed on flimsy strings.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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Jessica Kiang
The transgressiveness of Baena and Brie’s strange and sorrowful Horse Girl, is in how it turns the simplistic, inauthentic tweeness of the generic, quirky indie comedy in on itself to produce a rare and piercingly compassionate exploration of the sorts of madness that come from intense loneliness, and the intense loneliness that comes from being regarded as mad.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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Owen Gleiberman
The Father is a chamber piece, but it has the artistic verve to keep twisting the reality it shows us without becoming a stunt.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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Peter Debruge
Falling is unpretentious and perfectly accessible to mainstream audiences. Mortensen’s patience, his way with actors and his trust in our intelligence are not unlike late-career Eastwood, which isn’t a bad place to be so early in one’s directing career.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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Dennis Harvey
This is a well-cast, artfully handled effort that exercises sufficient restraint to really earn its requisite laughter and tears.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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Owen Gleiberman
Assassins is a terrific true-crime story, but it’s also a documentary thriller about the new world disorder.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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Reviewed by
Dennis Harvey
Densely packed yet lively and entertaining documentary, whose accessibility is heightened by some narrative play-acting.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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Reviewed by
Jessica Kiang
More even than Declan Quinn’s sumptuously old-school cinematography and the throwback styling and stock footage exteriors that deliberately mimic the Technicolor romances of old, it’s the fresh-faced naiveté of the storytelling that feels so anachronistic.- Variety
- Posted Jan 31, 2020
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
In Lost Girls, Liz Garbus takes the serial-killer thriller and turns it on its head, insisting that we see the victims as larger than the crimes that destroyed them.- Variety
- Posted Jan 31, 2020
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Reviewed by
Amy Nicholson
The film’s truly ridiculous plot choices — the phony twists that make you leave the theater feeling like you’ve inhaled a tank of carbon monoxide — are its own invention, bolted onto a likable, if formulaic, charmer.- Variety
- Posted Jan 31, 2020
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Joe Leydon
A deliberately paced and stealthily involving saunter through familiar territory.- Variety
- Posted Jan 31, 2020
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- Variety
- Posted Jan 31, 2020
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Reviewed by
Andrew Barker
The problem is that so many of its virtues feel compromised.- Variety
- Posted Jan 30, 2020
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Alissa Simon
While Incitement is a compelling watch, with archival footage neatly woven in, and offers a salutary warning about how easily democracies are endangered, this psychological profile of a political assassin nevertheless falls into a kind of moral trap.- Variety
- Posted Jan 30, 2020
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Peter Debruge
Chung transforms the specificity of his upbringing into something warm, tender and universal.- Variety
- Posted Jan 29, 2020
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- Variety
- Posted Jan 29, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Debruge
It’s an irreverent take on a form where earlier iterations were obliged to take themselves seriously. And somehow that liberates what felt like a slick but ironic riff on a tired genre to do something sincere.- Variety
- Posted Jan 28, 2020
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Peter Debruge
This fleet-footed, kaleidoscopic showcase is all about finding your voice so that the world can start to appreciate what it doesn’t know about those it hears from far too seldom.- Variety
- Posted Jan 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Tomris Laffly
The human dimension that gives the film brief jolts of energy never takes root. Instead, audiences are left grappling with a stuffy maze, albeit one presented with handsome production values and a filmmaker’s striking visual touch.- Variety
- Posted Jan 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Debruge
Movies almost never deal with the intricacies of marriage: finances, schooling, finding the right work-life balance. By contrast, The Nest burrows into the minutiae, and the rewards of going along with the O’Haras are worth it, at least for those willing to risk the frustration of a movie that plays by its own rules and doesn’t necessarily believe in happy endings.- Variety
- Posted Jan 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Amy Nicholson
Blast Beat cares far more about testing the limits of the family’s togetherness, and while the resolution doesn’t have the sweetness of a pop song, Arango is happy to settle for heavy metal discordance.- Variety
- Posted Jan 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Dennis Harvey
This adventurous seriocomedy has enough surprising elements and off-kilter humor to keep one intrigued, even if the payoff is debatable.- Variety
- Posted Jan 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Amy Nicholson
Beast Beast’s plot twist is a swing at gravitas that disrupts the balance of Madden’s naturalistic character study. This is the way teen life is, Madden says, until suddenly the film accelerates from reality to sensationalism, and trades humanity for pulp.- Variety
- Posted Jan 28, 2020
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Amy Nicholson
Though Feinberg is a singular figure in modern American history (few else could, or would, do his job), Worth hammers his story into a standard biopic template — Grinch Finds Heart — as though one man discovering empathy is truly priceless.- Variety
- Posted Jan 28, 2020
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