For 17,786 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 2.4 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: 9,137 out of 17786
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Mixed: 7,013 out of 17786
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Negative: 1,636 out of 17786
17786
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
A vital chapter of mid-century history is brought to life concisely, with intimacy and matter-of-fact artistry.- Variety
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- Variety
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Todd McCarthy
While the director's avid fans may be disappointed, upscalish mainstream auds, particularly women, will eat up this well-acted, emotionally focused adaptation of Jennifer Weiner's popular novel.- Variety
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Brian Lowry
Despite nice touches, pic meanders in the middle and ends flatly.- Variety
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Dennis Harvey
The wait for laughs lasts the entire length of Waiting ..., first feature from writer-director Rob McKittrick that aims to be a "Clerks"-type comedy set in a chain restaurant but ends up somewhere below a "Porky's" sequel.- Variety
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Ronnie Scheib
Documaker Daniel Peddle also works as a casting director, and so it is small wonder his crisp, concise, intimate portrait of six very different, self-styled "aggressives" -- women who stress their masculine sides -- should reveal in each a curious integrity and beauty.- Variety
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Eddie Cockrell
An intermittently gripping story about an idealistic young boxer who becomes disillusioned with the Third Reich during his elite training, Napola is finally KO'd by an overdose of Nazi fetishism.- Variety
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- Variety
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Ronnie Scheib
Comes off as lame and unfocused as its draggy dramatis personae.- Variety
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Ronnie Scheib
In scope, depth, rhythm and gags, "Pizzas" seems best suited to the small screen.- Variety
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Scott Foundas
Pic makes up in strong performances and wry observation what it sometimes lacks in narrative drive. Result is a perceptive (and unexpectedly moving) portrait of lives in crisis.- Variety
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Leslie Felperin
Park and co-helmer Steve Box stay faithful to the cozy core ingredients that made the clay duo's kudo-reaping shorts and Park's previous pic, "Chicken Run," so well loved. "Curse" delivers a wholesome morsel, happily not too cheesy, that families will nibble on as a treat.- Variety
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Ronnie Scheib
Zombie Honeymoon scores simultaneously as romantic, tragic, grotesque and screamingly funny- Variety
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David Rooney
The mesmerizing performance of Phillip Seymour Hoffman as the celebrated writer dominates every scene, while director Bennett Miller and screenwriter Dan Futterman's penetrating study enthralls in every aspect.- Variety
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John Anderson
Offers an inspiring story, lush visuals and accessible characters to give a black-hat-white-hat view of class struggle in America and England.- Variety
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Justin Chang
Not a thriller so much as an extremely violent swimsuit calendar, the lushly lensed but dramatically waterlogged Into the Blue is too infatuated with its scantily clad stars to make sense of all the drug dealers, boat looters and bloodthirsty sharks trying to hunt them down.- Variety
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Derek Elley
What makes Serenity refreshing is its avoidance of CGI, which gives the pic a much more human dimension; the evident chemistry between the cast; and a humor that doesn't rely simply on flip one-liners.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Critic Score
Item may draw curious women looking to cool their heels, say, while out shopping, but straight men can be expected to stay away in droves and Jaglom regulars will probably wait for the DVD.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Brian Lowry
Resting almost entirely on the shoulders of its young leads, both they and the pic lack the sparkle to sustain what seeks to be a whimsical premise but, except for a few moments, proves ponderous instead.- Variety
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Scott Foundas
Emerges as an overproduced novelty pic that looks and feels more like a company promo reel than an engaging piece of storytelling.- Variety
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Robert Koehler
Even more than in "Far From Heaven," Moore's housebound wife is a study in pent-up brilliance, with extraordinary devotion to her family.- Variety
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Robert Koehler
An honorable but failed attempt to dramatize the dynamics that propel a basically good man to become a suicide bomber, The War Within contains provocative points inside a dull package.- Variety
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- Critic Score
Henry Fonda and Jason Robards relish each screen minute as the heavies, and Charles Bronson plays Clint Eastwood's 'man with no name' role. (Review of Original Release)- Variety
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Justin Chang
Brimming with fanciful ideas about life, romance and the rejuvenating power of music, Sueno sings a lovely tune but chokes on its own banal lyrics.- Variety
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Ronnie Scheib
Alternating between New York clubs by night and the colorful streets and countryside of Santa Domingo by day, pic captures the spirit of the music and the nation that gave birth to it.- Variety
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Ronnie Scheib
Rain strives for a "Magnolia"-type tapestry of quiet desperation. But after 90 unremitting minutes of badly acted, atrociously written histrionic misery, pic leaves one praying for frogs.- Variety
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Ronnie Scheib
Winner of the Golden Starfish fiction competition at the Hamptons fest, pic's gutsy, madly ambiguous unleashing of a mixed bag of religious reactions attests to a genuine sense of regionalism.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
A muted but nicely observed study of a Russian woman's gradual estrangement from her domineering Memphis music-legend husband.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
Lack of depth, complexity or strangeness make this a relatively routine entry for the director.- Variety
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