Wall Street Journal's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
For 3,942 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 44% higher than the average critic
  • 2% same as the average critic
  • 54% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.6 points lower than other critics. (0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 62
Highest review score: 100 Les Misérables
Lowest review score: 0 The Limits of Control
Score distribution:
3942 movie reviews
  1. Spellbinding on its own terms, a modernist fable with a madly romantic soul.
    • Wall Street Journal
  2. Shrewdly conceived, confidently executed and outrageously entertaining.
    • Wall Street Journal
  3. Ever so slightly defective in the area of coherence; it plays as if it should have been written by a committee but they didn't bother to convene one.
    • Wall Street Journal
  4. A good subject has been ill-served by Ms. Greenwald's cliched script and clumsy direction.
    • Wall Street Journal
  5. Remarkably joyless, even though Ms. Jolie is a formidable presence with the potential for becoming a witty one.
    • Wall Street Journal
  6. Appeal lies on the bright, shiny surface of its ostensibly simple plot, and in its rat-a-tat-tat language, which often sounds like Mamet-visits-Spyne.
    • Wall Street Journal
  7. Bears no resemblance to the smarmy fraud that Roberto Benigni perpetrated in "Life Is Beautiful."
    • Wall Street Journal
  8. An ugly exercise in big-budget carnage.
    • Wall Street Journal
  9. The special effects are variable, but even when they're good they don't have much impact because Evolution, with its self-trashing spirit, turns moviegoers into bemused bysitters.
    • Wall Street Journal
  10. Like so many parties, this one goes on too long.
    • Wall Street Journal
  11. Qualifies as a pleasant time-killer, but it's 20,000 leagues beneath what it might have been.
    • Wall Street Journal
  12. Ms. Wynter's performance is only one of many failings in a heavily accented costume drama that Bruce Beresford has directed turgidly from Marilyn Levy's amateurish script.
    • Wall Street Journal
  13. If this adds up to a full-fledged feature film, I'm a monkey's uncle.
    • Wall Street Journal
  14. Certainly grows in its own right, into a coarse-grained summer vaudeville that could have been much smarter and sharper without losing its target audience.
    • Wall Street Journal
  15. The result is an enchanting story of love from an idealized past that endures in the mundane present.
    • Wall Street Journal
  16. Littered with low points -- lame comedy, dubious history, fumbling drama and a love story so inept as to make a pacifist long for war.
    • Wall Street Journal
  17. Directed with such a confident, delicate touch. Nothing is insisted on, yet whole lives are discovered and revealed in vignettes that seem as spontaneous as a laugh or a gasp.
    • Wall Street Journal
  18. This beguiling fable, with its darkly distinctive look, does DreamWorks proud.
    • Wall Street Journal
  19. A movie you can't readily get out of your head.
    • Wall Street Journal
  20. A thrillingly, thoroughly wonderful film.
    • Wall Street Journal
  21. A deeper problem in The King Is Alive is an almost total absence of spontaneity.
    • Wall Street Journal
  22. A Knight's Tale wasn't made for people like me. It was made for the kids of summer.
    • Wall Street Journal
  23. I might have liked About Adam more if its supposedly irresistible hero -- and the movie itself -- hadn''t been so smirky.
    • Wall Street Journal
  24. Eureka demands active attention, but rewards it with emotional resonance, thematic complexity and a succession of images that take up permanent residence in our brains.
  25. This frenzied sequel has all of the clank but none of the swank of the previous version.
    • Wall Street Journal
  26. I took it as a pretty piece of ephemera, and I must confess that I laughed a lot.
    • Wall Street Journal
  27. Ragging on Town & Country is like shooting a school of fish that's already belly up in a fetid barrel, but the movie's ineptitude is almost incomparable.
    • Wall Street Journal
  28. The team's (Merchant-Ivory) best adaptation yet of a Henry James novel.
    • Wall Street Journal
  29. I did enjoy the movie's mercurial moods -- anxiety, terror, whimsical horror -- and I welcomed its confirmation that the work of the devil includes SUVs.
    • Wall Street Journal
  30. A rube's-eye view of Hollywood, but the rube is weary, and those around him seem to be suffering from terminal torpor.
    • Wall Street Journal

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