For 17,771 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 2.5 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: 9,130 out of 17771
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Mixed: 7,005 out of 17771
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Negative: 1,636 out of 17771
17771
movie
reviews
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- Critic Score
This tense, offbeat piece of science-fiction is occasionally difficult to follow due to the strangeness of its scientific premise. Action nevertheless is increasingly exciting.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
Talky in the best sense, the film exhilarates with its lively, authentic classroom banter while its emotional undercurrents build steadily but almost imperceptibly over a swift 129 minutes. One of the most substantive and purely entertaining movies in competition at Cannes this year.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
There is plenty of good work to be found here, and pic certainly grabs the viewer by the collar in a way not found everyday in contemporary films.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
A scorching blast of tense genre filmmaking shot through with rich veins of melancholy, down-home philosophy and dark, dark humor, No Country for Old Men reps a superior match of source material and filmmaking talent.- Variety
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- Variety
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Siddhant Adlakha
The film isn’t just richly textured, but rigorous in its unveiling of both history and modernity.- Variety
- Posted Jan 30, 2025
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Jay Weissberg
Claire Denis’ latest may appear whisper-thin on the surface, yet it’s marvelously profound, illuminating the love between a father and daughter but also highlighting the difficulty of relinquishing what most people spend a lifetime putting into place.- Variety
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Guy Lodge
Remake is extraordinarily clear-eyed for a work so broken-hearted: at once a home movie, an intimate diary and an expansive study of the filmmaker’s purpose, constantly disrupting its own conclusions with expressions of anger, amusement and still-unresolved confusion.- Variety
- Posted Dec 12, 2025
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- Variety
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- Critic Score
The ending is happy, but the general effect of the film is disturbing, so compelling is De Sica's description of a man's solitude.- Variety
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- Critic Score
Unquestionably a finely observed, deeply felt work, though with some nagging problems in pacing and structure.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
As a filmmaker, Baker is a graceful neorealist voyeur who thrives on improvisation, and his storytelling, in The Florida Project, is mostly just a series of anecdotes. But that turns out to be enough.- Variety
- Posted May 24, 2017
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Jay Weissberg
In the hands of a master, indignation and tragedy can be rendered with clarity yet subtlety, setting hysteria aside for deeper, more richly shaded tones. Abderrahmane Sissako is just such a master.- Variety
- Posted May 25, 2014
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- Critic Score
Armed with a superior script by Anthony Shaffer, an excellent cast, and a top technical crew, Alfred Hitchcock fashions a firstrate melodrama about an innocent man hunted by Scotland Yard for a series of sex-strangulation murders.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Peter Debruge
I confess my incapacity for his particular strain of slow cinema for two reasons: First, to let audiences know that it’s OK to be frustrated by the experience — you’re not alone. And second, so you might appreciate what it means that Days worked on me. Instead of leaning in, as I’m wont to do with challenging movies, I settled back into my chair and let the rhythm wash over me, lull me into its relaxing embrace.- Variety
- Posted Aug 12, 2021
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Based on his playlet, Still Life from Tonight at 8.30, Brief Encounter does more for Noel Coward's reputation as a skilled film producer than In Which We Serve. His use of express trains thundering through a village station coupled with frantic, last-minute dashes for local trains is only one of the clever touches masking the inherent static quality of the drama.- Variety
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- Critic Score
Newman gives an excellent performance, assisted by a terrific supporting cast, including George Kennedy, outstanding as the unofficial leader of the cons who yields first place to Newman.- Variety
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- Variety
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Reviewed by
Peter Debruge
Never before has anyone made a documentary like The Act of Killing, and the filmmakers seem at a loss in terms of how to organize the many threads of what they capture...Still, essential and enraging, The Act of Killing is a film that begs to be seen, then never watched again.- Variety
- Posted Mar 18, 2013
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Reviewed by
David Stratton
This visually lush but sometimes ponderously slowfilm is a poetic saga of love and loss.- Variety
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Todd McCarthy
There are some unsatisfactory elements–slow spots occur during the middle stretch, the mild anti-establishment stance is getting to be a bit cliche and one never knows whether E.T.’s mortal illness is physical or psychological in nature, or both. But, as with “Close Encounters,” the truly lovely and moving ending more than makes up for everything. Chalk up another smash for Spielberg.- Variety
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Todd McCarthy
If the original Apocalypse Now was a narrow, swiftly flowing river that gradually closed in on the patrol boat carrying Captain Willard into the heart of darkness, Apocalypse Now Redux is a wide river of greater depth, more variable currents and some fascinating new ports of call.- Variety
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Andrew Barker
At once dreamlike and ruthlessly naturalistic, steadily composed yet shot through with roiling currents of anxiety, Never Rarely Sometimes Always is a quietly devastating gem.- Variety
- Posted Jan 25, 2020
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In a decade largely devoted to male buddy-buddy films, brutal rape fantasies, and impersonal special effects extravaganzas, Woody Allen has almost single-handedly kept alive the idea of heterosexual romance in American films. Annie Hall is a touching and hilarious love story that is Allen’s most three-dimensional film to date.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
Looks to please the book's legions of fans with its imaginatively scrupulous rendering of the tome's characters and worlds on the screen, as well as the uninitiated with its uninterrupted flow of incident and spectacle.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Ronnie Scheib
The novelty of helmer Gardner’s approach to 9/11, her insider’s look at the almost unimaginable difficulties faced by Cantor Fitzgerald in the weeks following the attack, and the abundance of coverage spanning 10 years of inhouse interactions more than compensate for the docu’s occasional unevenness.- Variety
- Posted Sep 6, 2013
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
It’s a remarkable film — chilling and profound, meditative and immersive, a movie that holds human darkness up to the light and examines it as if under a microscope. In a sense, it’s a movie that plays off our voyeurism, our curiosity to see the unseeable. Yet it does so with a bracing originality.- Variety
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Reviewed by
Sonia Saraiya
There are moments in “Let It Fall” that feel like a significant reframing of the riots, both in terms of what actually happened and in terms of who’s really to blame.- Variety
- Posted Apr 20, 2017
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
Robert Redford's handsome, smartly constructed new film stands likely to capture the imagination of the educated, culturally inclined public.- Variety
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Peter Debruge
This is the director’s most accessible and naturalistic film, using everyday characters to test how well modern-day Russia is maintaining the social contract with its citizens.- Variety
- Posted May 24, 2014
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