For 17,779 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 | |
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| Lowest review score: | Divorce: The Musical |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 9,134 out of 17779
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Mixed: 7,009 out of 17779
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Negative: 1,636 out of 17779
17779
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Brian Lowry
If the first mission made roughly $50 million domestically, the sky could be the limit for this much better sequel -- a clever spoof of "Rambo" and a dozen other movies that employs the usual scattershot "Airplane!" approach but boasts a higher shooting percentage than its forebear. Look out, comedy fans: Fox is coming to get you.- Variety
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An immensely ambitious and audacious love story spanning 30 years and two continents.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
Despite all its agreeable revisionism and breezy bonhomie, Posse has the feel of a mish-mash of elements all thrown into a big pot and stirred. Lacking dramatic grounding and structuring, even the pertinent revelations that will be most surprising and interesting to modern audiences carry more intellectual than emotional resonance.- Variety
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A delightful, buoyant new take on an old theme, deftly mixing political cynicism with elements of Mr Smith Goes to Washington.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Leonard Klady
The brief, meteoric, tragic life of martial arts star Bruce Lee forms the basis of Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story. The film is an unlikely pastiche of traditional biography, Hollywood saga, chopsocky set pieces and inter-racial romance. Seemingly contrary elements and styles nonetheless mesh into an entertaining whole and the result proves extremely touching and haunting.- Variety
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Producer-director Taylor Hackford clearly wants this to be a major cinematic exploration of the Latino experience, from its ponderous near-three-hour length to its more-than-occasional sermonizing. Unfortunately, disjointed storytelling and uneven performances undermine those aspirations.- Variety
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Wonderfully atmospheric use of New York locations and familiar characters brings “Night” to life. Unfortunately, there are many scenes, particularly those of Anderson and his obnoxious pals, that kill time and detract from the romantic leads. Ultimately it’s not really an ensemble piece but closer to a film with alternating casts or vignettes.- Variety
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The writer's desk intriguingly becomes a gladitorial arena for warring manifestations of the same personality in The Dark Half, George A. Romero's adaptation of Stephen King's 1989 bestseller, a classic Jekyll-and-Hyde story.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Emanuel Levy
Johnny Depp and Mary Stuart Masterson render such startling performances in the romantic fable Benny & Joon that they almost overcome the trappings of an emotional tale that is not particularly well written or directed.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Emanuel Levy
Awash in romantic nostalgia for bygone childhood spent in summer camps, Indian Summer is a sentimental, TV sitcom-like, feel-good film. However, its humor and first-rate acting could ensure a strong opening and modest longterm B.O. life.- Variety
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- Variety
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
Unfortunately, after a relatively promising warmup, pic actually proceeds to flatten out the characters in the latter sections and to make them less dimensional and interesting than they initially seemed.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
This is one of those high-concept pictures with a big windup and weak delivery.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Leonard Klady
Sweet and sincere, the film is also a remarkably shallow wade, rife with incident and slim on substance.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Brian Lowry
In fact, with its basic shortage of gore and only brief glimpses of nudity, it’s hard to imagine what in the film prompted an R rating, unless it stands for “ridiculous.”- Variety
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Reviewed by
Leonard Klady
The music is overbearing, the camera and lighting too bright and obvious, and the production design borders on the cheesy. Performances range from competent to just plain embarrassing.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
If imitation is the highest form of flattery, then “Point of No Return,” a soulless, efficiently slavish remake of “La Femme Nikita,” creates a whole new category of homage-paying.- Variety
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Although the film is punched up by some energetic cutting and hip-hop music, many dialogue scenes, particularly early on, are badly written and awkwardly staged.- Variety
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Tamra Davis, a music video director with the well-received feature debut Guncrazy on her resume, might have really had something here had she settled on any one of the many paths the movie starts down.- Variety
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A truly harrowing sequence in the final reel fails to save Fire in the Sky, an otherwise prosaic approach to the gee-whiz genre of UFO aliens snatching a human specimen for examination.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Leonard Klady
Apart from its appealing young cast and period score, it has precious little to entice audiences into movie theaters.- Variety
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A one-joke sketch that doesn't work as a feature, Castle Rock's Amos & Andrew raises the question: "How did this film ever get made?" Few audience members will sit through its entirety to ponder that issue.- Variety
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Spanish lingo crime meller has a verve and cheekiness that's partly a smart wedding of such influences as Sergio Leone, George Miller and south-of-the-border noir.- Variety
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Blending almost nonstop violence with humorous parody, Sam Raimi's latest excursion into horror-kitsch seems more like an irreverent "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court."- Variety
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The film is inconsistent in tone and pace; fortunately the pay-off works, bringing some much needed warmth to the area.- Variety
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Reviewed by
David Stratton
Technically, this is Jackson's best to date, with state of the art creature and gore effects by Richard Taylor and prosthetics design by Bob McCarron. There's any amount of dismemberment, disembowelling, beheading, and the like, all of it handled with bloody conviction.- Variety
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Reviewed by
David Stratton
Within the confines of this tried-and-true formula, Luhrmann has concocted a feel-good entertainment, which is lively, original (in an old-fashioned sort of way) and charming.- Variety
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Appealing lead performances elevate this modestly scaled romantic tearjerker, from a first script by Tom Sierchio.- Variety
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Some last-reel thrills and cathartic violence provide commercial oomph to the otherwise tedious thriller The Vanishing. This is one remake that sacrifices much of what made the original work so well.- Variety
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More an imitation than a parody, this would-be comedy is very short on laughs.- Variety
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