For 17,757 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 2.3 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: 9,120 out of 17757
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Mixed: 7,002 out of 17757
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Negative: 1,635 out of 17757
17757
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
Even as it dabbles in toe-curling cringe comedy, The Travel Companion is ultimately too genial a work for such tonal extremes.- Variety
- Posted May 8, 2026
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
Heavy on benevolent feeling and shy of outright human conflict, the film floats and sprawls and spirals like the creature to which it’s glowingly in thrall, but a bit of spine wouldn’t go amiss.- Variety
- Posted May 7, 2026
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
“Hit Me Hard and Soft” is a concert film that doesn’t look and feel like other concert films. It’s a true experience, because of a combination of the show itself and the way that Cameron has filmed it.- Variety
- Posted May 7, 2026
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
Mortal Kombat II, a sequel to the 2021 Mortal Kombat reboot, is still an old-school video-game trash extravaganza: all sound and fury and flying bodies and jargony world-building, propped up by a sludgy excuse for a story.- Variety
- Posted May 6, 2026
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Tomris Laffly
You don’t leave The Last One for the Road with the feeling that you have seen something life-affirmingly original. But there is still a sense of disarming comfort in the film’s down-to-earth demeanor, and Giulio’s rewarding if predictable arc.- Variety
- Posted May 4, 2026
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
In “Power to the People,” we see archival footage of John and Yoko onstage with Elephant’s Memory, who are a killer band, but thanks to the freshness of the editing (by Ben Wainwright-Pearce), one half of the screen will be on the singer, and the other half will be peering at a band member or three, soaking up their energy, making the two sections of the image feel unified in their very separation, as if the film were breaking down the atomic structure of rock ‘n’ roll.- Variety
- Posted May 2, 2026
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
On the story level, Swapped is simple to a fault, yet there’s a surprise enchantment to it — it’s a woodland fairy tale for seven-year-olds, but on that score it’s visually ravishing and actually rather touching.- Variety
- Posted May 1, 2026
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The series’ fourth season is still being rolled out through the summer, making “Azure Sea” play like a long-weekend getaway as opposed to a true feature-length fable. The fans are sure to clock in for its extra nuggets of lore, but there are few reasons for a non-Slimehead to take the plunge.- Variety
- Posted May 1, 2026
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
Blue Film is an unabashed provocation, but not a hollow one. Its dual protagonists — one a convicted pedophile, one a hyper-macho fetish camboy — don’t invite uncomplicated sympathy, so it’s just as well Tuttle is more interested in understanding them, exposing their respective damage in articulate detail, and letting the audience take things from there.- Variety
- Posted Apr 30, 2026
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
The film's chief pleasures are those of practiced professionals doing their job, and doing it well. None of the stars here is slacking, and their combined, easily resumed chemistry ensures that this sequel, for good long stretches, feels like old times — even if it's hard to imagine fans of its predecessor cherishing repeat viewings to quite the same extent.- Variety
- Posted Apr 29, 2026
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
A lively, knife-sharp, impeccably researched and reported documentary that answers every conceivable question you’ve ever had about crypto, and does so in a way that’s brisk and funny and illuminating rather than intimidating.- Variety
- Posted Apr 27, 2026
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
The melodrama begins at such a high pitch in Desplechin’s latest, you might think it has nowhere to go but down, yet this earnestly inflamed tale of art, grief, betrayal and all-consuming amour on steroids keeps finding new, hysterical ways to surprise.- Variety
- Posted Apr 27, 2026
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
The filmmakers have lightened and brightened their source material to a kid-friendly degree — even the English countryside, as glisteningly shot by George Steel, has never looked less overcast. Yet there’s wisdom amid the silliness, as the story gently makes a case for the necessity of grief, mindfulness and mortal awareness, even in a life otherwise unburdened by adult human responsibility.- Variety
- Posted Apr 27, 2026
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Owen Gleiberman
Deep Water isn’t terrible for what it is, but what it is is disaster product.- Variety
- Posted Apr 25, 2026
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
Kormákur’s film doesn’t trade in surprises, but offers more than enough heart-in-mouth action spectacle to compensate.- Variety
- Posted Apr 23, 2026
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Owen Gleiberman
Simply put, this is not a movie about Michael Jackson’s dark side. Yet the surprise of “Michael” is how well it plays, and what an engrossing middle-of-the-road biopic it is. It’s basically an ’80s-TV-movie version of the Michael Jackson story with sharper acting and snazzier photography. It- Variety
- Posted Apr 21, 2026
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
By turns tenderly observed, improbably dark and perkily sitcom-esque, it’s certainly erratic, and uncertainly much else.- Variety
- Posted Apr 17, 2026
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
Jolie, drawing on a family history of cancer for which she herself underwent preventative surgeries, gives a vivid performance, endowing Maxine with cool-director verve and then a fear and sorrow we can’t help but respond to. Yet it never feels like the health-crisis movie and the portrait-of-the-fashion-world movie entirely go together.- Variety
- Posted Apr 17, 2026
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Reviewed by
Jessica Kiang
Colours of Time doesn’t want to surprise so much as to please, and the multiple, largely antagonist-free storylines are just charming enough to keep the absence of real conflict from becoming a problem.- Variety
- Posted Apr 16, 2026
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
Brashly violent, clattery and pleasingly untied to any direct predecessor, the result is more generic than its braggy auteur claims might promise, but there’s a lot here for gorehounds to feast on.- Variety
- Posted Apr 16, 2026
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
A mostly pretty innocuous affair — give or take some par-for-the-course ethnic stereotyping and at least one close-up involving a prosthetic glans — it’s neither good nor bad to any memorable degree, not as riotous as it could have been but not devoid of low-hanging laughs either.- Variety
- Posted Apr 15, 2026
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
“Mother Mary” turns into the most befuddlingly pretentious movie about a pop star since Brady Corbet’s “Vox Lux.” It heads down a blind alley of cosmic meaning that, in the end, means nothing.- Variety
- Posted Apr 14, 2026
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
A generally brittle, distant affair, Outcome largely saps Reeves of his genial, unaffected charisma, leaving him to play the carapace of a man who’s lost any real sense of who he is when not in character.- Variety
- Posted Apr 9, 2026
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Reviewed by
Guy Lodge
You, Me & Tuscany passes the time painlessly enough, but it’s never quite the escape it wants to be: It’s packaged so familiarly and so cautiously, we hardly believe its celebration of free, restlessly wandering impulse.- Variety
- Posted Apr 8, 2026
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
Faces of Death is “ambitious” trash, with the courage of its own gaudy thematic grandiloquence.- Variety
- Posted Apr 5, 2026
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Reviewed by
Carlos Aguilar
The sort of film that urges one to tell everyone about it so that they too can bask in its wondrous pleasures, “DJ Ahmet” is a revelation in that it seamlessly straddles the line between laugh-out-loud crowd-pleaser and art-house gem with affecting gravitas.- Variety
- Posted Apr 2, 2026
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Reviewed by
Murtada Elfadl
In trying to do too much, the filmmakers end up with much less than they could have.- Variety
- Posted Apr 1, 2026
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
It’s a mad jumble, an eager product-tie-in mess.- Variety
- Posted Mar 31, 2026
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
You’ve got to say this much for Kristoffer Borgli: In The Drama he’s an original, like the bastard stepchild of Dogme 95 and “Wedding Crashers.”- Variety
- Posted Mar 31, 2026
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist is a scary, dizzying and essential documentary. If you have any interest in artificial intelligence (which is to say: the future), you should go out and see it right now.- Variety
- Posted Mar 26, 2026
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