Variety's Scores

For 17,777 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 52% higher than the average critic
  • 4% same as the average critic
  • 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: 100 IMAX: Hubble 3D
Lowest review score: 0 Divorce: The Musical
Score distribution:
17777 movie reviews
  1. The music is fine, but there's little else here to hold the attention of non-Deadheads.
  2. A retro sci-fi tale that takes its time stoking a low-key absurdism to high silliness. Initial slow going pays off in cumulative laughs.
  3. Hot-wired, white-knuckle thriller.
  4. A pleasant and polished first feature for director Gene Cajayon.
  5. Will serve as an excellent gauge of any viewer's tolerance level for schmaltzy contrivance and manipulation.
  6. The confused script makes this a tough film for audiences to dig into.
  7. Ominously atmospheric study of police corruption dangles danger and sinister motives at every turn.
  8. Surprisingly amusing.
  9. Bids to whip homoerotic iconography into something palatable for those suspicious of the cuisine.
  10. An atmospheric and cumulatively impressive feature-length debut from Argentine writer-director Lucrecia Martel.
  11. An entrancing ensemble piece, directed with calm assurance, acted by a fine ensemble, and structured and scripted with wit and precision.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 Critic Score
    Long on jabber but short on yocks.
  12. Richly satisfying both as subversive, music-biz primer and as gritty, true-life underdog story.
  13. "Big Night" meets "The Sopranos" in Dinner Rush.
  14. Highly enjoyable when all its gears are clicking, but rarely as good as it should be.
  15. The few who saw the embalmed adaptation of "Snow Falling on Cedars" will recognize the same stifling approach brought to this more accessible material by director Scott Hicks.
  16. Misses its comic targets as often as it hits them but is endearing all the same for the good-natured cheer with which it skewers the eminently skewerable.
  17. Generates tension from the get-go, albeit of an increasingly unpleasant variety, on its way to a disappointingly generic climax.
  18. This depiction of the trials and tribulations of a working-class Catholic family during the Depression is a far more intimate viewing experience than the similarly themed "Angela's Ashes."
  19. Conveys enough of the stirring true-life drama recounted in Butler's other Shackleton docu to satisfy ticketbuyers who demand substance even in larger-than-life entertainment.
  20. Midnight moviegoers aren't so desperate that they will opt for such trailer trash.
  21. Arguably the best sports-oriented documentary since "Hoop Dreams."
  22. Apocalyptic gobbledygook.
  23. Glitter deserves yet another title: "A Star Is Dull." As phony a vehicle as one could possibly concoct for a wannabe movie star, pic carries Mariah Carey into a swamp of gloppy melodrama.
  24. Belzberg's unsparing camera sometimes portrays a level of cruelty that tests viewers' tolerance, but her fearless aesthetic is also a measure of the film's brilliant indictment of any society that can allow its most vulnerable to slip into oblivion.
  25. This wobbly docu-drama ends up being caught in between the impulse to make theatrical a true story and the usual Imax mission of imparting information about the natural world in an entertaining way for families.
  26. While it plays more like stage or TV sketch-comedy shtick than film material, this modest, visually unimposing production remains entertaining thanks to its ironic observations and winning sense of folly.
  27. There's nothing in genredom quite so unhinged as the badly made psycho-thriller, and long before it's over, The Glass House collapses from wretched design and execution.
  28. There's no cork inside Hardball, but there's more than enough corn. Everything about the movie is geared for maximum uplifting and tear-jerking effect, and seems designed, in the end, to question the old saw that there's no crying in baseball.
    • 34 Metascore
    • 60 Critic Score
    An edgy, energetic romantic thriller in the tradition of "Run Lola Run," "A Life Less Ordinary" and "Out of Sight."

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