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 | |
|---|---|---|
| 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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- Critic Score
An easy to take followup to his previous pic Mystery Train. Beginning with an outer-space shot gradually zeroing in on planet Earth, the director covers in five separate segments his favorite theme of lonely people interacting but ultimately facing the great void alone.- Variety
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Hook feels as much like a massive amusement park ride as it does a film. Spirited, rambunctious, often messy and undisciplined.- Variety
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Weighed down by a midsection even flabbier than the long-in-the-tooth cast, director Nicholas Meyer still delivers enough of what Trek auds hunger for to justify the trek to the local multiplex.- Variety
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- Critic Score
Despite pic’s many-splendored outbursts of filmic creativity and intense emotion, final result, about the opposite destinies of a Polish girl and a French girl who look alike and have the same name and tics, remains a head-scratching cipher with blurred edges.- Variety
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A lovely film that ranks with the best of Disney’s animated classics, Beauty and the Beast is a tale freshly retold.- Variety
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Despite inspired casting and nifty visual trappings, the eagerly awaited Addams Family figures as a major disappointment. First-time director Barry Sonnenfeld never really gets past the skeletal plot, which plays like a collection of sitcom one-liners augmented by feature-film special effects.- Variety
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The story ultimately feels too conventional, and the portrait of the artist is too shallow to stand as a compelling or convincing evocation of a complex mind.- Variety
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Filled with small, telling moments rather than big events, film never really gets inside Fred’s head, but it neatly sketches the external aspects of his predicament.- Variety
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Audiences unfamiliar with the first film will be hard put to follow the action as it incoherently hops about in time and space.- Variety
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A pretense of social responsibility and most of the necessary tension get lost in a combination of excessive gore and over-the-top perfs in The People Under the Stairs.- Variety
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As a precise observation of British types and a virtuoso piece of carefully observed ensemble playing, the film would be hard to beat.- Variety
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The Shakespearean side of the story falls short due to Reeves' very narrow range as an actor.- Variety
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Frankie and Johnny is an all-star, high-gloss, feel-good romantic feature sitcom. Amiably written and performed but fearsomely predictable, this middle-of-the-road adaptation of Terrence McNally’s off-Broadway hit [the 1987Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune] invites audiences to indulge in watching beautiful movie stars play lonely little people struggling to find love.- Variety
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Mamet’s direction gives much of the film a bracing, refreshing tone as he works to express the shattering tensions of Gold’s work.- Variety
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Screenplay [from a story by Fred Dekker and Menno Meyjes] offers unusually good dialog for the smooth-talking Washington and a number of scenes to savor. Pic threatens to become truly absorbing as Lithgow’s brilliant revenge scheme unfolds, but Ricochet soon abandons cleverness in favor of spectacle.- Variety
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The bringing together of a soldier headed for Vietnam and a future hippie on the night before President Kennedy’s assassination represents a frightfully schematic screenwriting device. But Savoca underplays the character development to such an extent that the film has a muted, very modest impact.- Variety
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The performances are all on the money, but two are outstanding. Newcomer Witherspoon manages to strike exactly the right note as the tomboy on the verge of womanhood while Waterston works on several levels at once.- Variety
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Essentially, this is a football version of the equally contrived and only slightly less hokey baseball comedy Major League.- Variety
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The Fisher King has two actors at the top of their form, and a compelling, well-directed and well-produced story.- Variety
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A tortured examination of the disintegration of a Mid-western family, The Indian Runner is very much actors' cinema. Rambling, indulgent and joltingly raw at times, Sean Penn's first outing as a director takes a fair amount of patience to get through but has an integrity that intermittently serves it well.- Variety
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Delivers enough violence, black humor and even a final reel in 3-D to hit paydirt with horror-starved audiences.- Variety
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Director Alan Parker's story of a band of young Dubliners playing American '60s soul is fresh, well-executed and original.- Variety
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- Variety
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Engaging film style is buoyed by an infectious sense of fun and punctuated by wild and woolly character turns.- Variety
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A dopey, almost poignantly bad actioner about two legends-in-their-own-minds, who bungle their way through a bank robbery on behalf of a friend, stands out only for big stars Mickey Rourke and Don Johnson.- Variety
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Scene after scene is filled with a ferocious strength and humor. Michael Lerner's performance as a Mayer-like studio overlord is sensational.- Variety
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Has no real taste of its own, but, in its mildness and predictability, offers the reassurance of a fast-food or motel chain.- Variety
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Return to the Blue Lagoon is a pointless spinoff of the 1980 hit, which was itself a remake of a 1949 British pic.- Variety
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Long Island filmaker Hal Hartley progresses from his debut feature, The Unbelievable Truth to this bleak, off-center comedy about dysfunctional families in working class suburbia.- Variety
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