Washington Post's Scores

For 11,478 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 46% higher than the average critic
  • 2% same as the average critic
  • 52% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 5.2 points lower than other critics. (0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 60
Highest review score: 100 Oppenheimer
Lowest review score: 0 Dolittle
Score distribution:
11478 movie reviews
  1. The effect isn't just frenetic, unfunny and dull. It's kind of creepy.
  2. Strikes several beautiful and lingering chords about the human condition, but the notes of the music ultimately never come together to form a coherent song.
    • 38 Metascore
    • 30 Critic Score
    The plot, the dialogue and the main characters' love connection are basically mind-numbing.
  3. A small film of surpassing beauty and sadness. Yet its bittersweet flavor isn't artificial, but rather the product of the slow ripening of character.
  4. Not just a bad thriller but also a thing of pain.
    • 31 Metascore
    • 30 Critic Score
    With all the dog dung in Envy, it's almost too easy to generalize that it stinks. But it does, unfortunately, despite the big-name actors in its cast.
  5. Even the staunchest of golfheads must know they're watching a cut-and-trite accounting.
  6. You're left, as with certain vivid dreams, filled with memorable images but not completely able to account for what you just experienced.
  7. Smart, funny, well-acted and visually lively.
  8. Has important things to tell viewers about global politics, and in an eerily resonant way.
  9. The plot, loosely derived from Madison Smartt Bell's "Doctor Sleep," is utterly stale. On their way to confront ancient evil, Strother and Losey keep tripping over timeworn cliches.
  10. A loud, choppily edited and surprisingly unengaging portrait of speed demons.
  11. This movie is a predictable, gruesome piece of business.
  12. Combines novelistic detail with cinematic sweep.
    • 57 Metascore
    • 70 Critic Score
    A film whose far-fetched foundation is overshadowed by the endearing story.
  13. Clumsily under-written and feverishly overacted, it's as embarrassing to watch as it is perplexing.
  14. Watching Thurman's character "triumph" in a context as joyless and self-referential as Tarantino's is a soul-deadening experience, one that over two hours takes on the same dreary monotone as the cheapest pornography.
  15. Don't hold your breath waiting for The Punisher to be original, not for one second of its torturous two hours.
    • 44 Metascore
    • 30 Critic Score
    The humor is rigorously unoriginal and it all feels a bit like minstrelsy, a freakish, ritualistic nod to things your grandfather might have found funny.
  16. A compelling if singularly sour tale.
  17. It's as pretentious and wispy as its title.
  18. It's alternately monotonous, hot and dramatic, which makes for a peculiar, not entirely unsatisfying atmosphere of neo -- or is that post? -- noir. What it all means, of course, I have no idea.
  19. Nothing in this film makes any sense, and Stuart Blumberg, David T. Wagner and Brent Goldberg's script merely gets more preposterous as it elaborates on its implausible premise.
  20. Leaden, laugh-free, lacking anything resembling a heart, mind or soul.
  21. Good but it SEEMS even better because of its evocative setting.
  22. These storied 13 days feel like the Hundred Years War.
  23. Good and entertaining fun.
  24. Cedric the Entertainer is the best (and probably only) reason to take this "Vacation."
  25. One mediocre, ploddingly predictable film, loaded down with cheesy Hollywood tactics.
    • 85 Metascore
    • 60 Critic Score
    Though lacking in any particular narrative surprise, the film nevertheless takes the viewer completely by surprise several times.
  26. Silly? Contrived? Vapid? You bet. Put more simply, "The Prince & Me" is . . . cute.
  27. Surprisingly smart, graphically faithful live-action adaptation of the Mike Mignola series
  28. Comes across less as a fully realized work of storytelling than as a commercial for a corporation whose goal of entertainment has been replaced by that of making money.
  29. There's something secondhand about everything here. Hoge (this is his debut) seems to be mimicking the tone and fabric of other, better indie movies.
  30. An elegy for an aging rock pixie.
  31. Possibly the worst thug-life flick to be released in the past 72 hours, this movie sags under the weight of the bling-bling cliches strung around its headless neck.
  32. As little as there is to recommend in Scooby-Doo 2, it must be noted that the human cast has done an uncanny job of inhabiting their two-dimensional characters.
  33. Will appeal most strongly to viewers who think Tom Hanks, who plays a thief and a potential murderer, can do no wrong.
  34. The film oozes sentimentality, soap-opera bathos and clumsy cribbings from the Frank Capra book of small-town values. Those are its good points.
  35. It plays like a baldfaced, brazen insult, but it is a stunningly accomplished one.
  36. Despite this tale's surface sheen and propulsive momentum, it never transports one very far.
  37. Taking Lives would have to work nights to reach mediocrity.
  38. Very, very funny, thanks to a lively first script by Mark O'Rowe, who has a good ear for earthy dialogue and a sense of life's absurd little synchronicities.
  39. The movie has many of the elements that made the first "Dawn" so darkly entertaining.
  40. Neither wholly cynical nor wholly romantic, Kaufman's story is a balance of smarts and sentiment. It's the most fully realized working out of his two favorite obsessions: the subjective nature of experience and the psychological mysteries of pair bonding.
  41. A charming and astute first-person documentary.
  42. Kari may eventually go far, but for now he's one of the less interesting inhabitants of international art cinema's disaffected-youth ghetto.
  43. Maestro is for people already aware of this history. For everyone else, this is pretty much invitation-only.
  44. Is Spartan a perfect, or even a great, movie? Probably not. But in its prickly irascibility and deeply unsettling intelligence, it makes for a very, very good one.
  45. Well-made, if rather predictable, new-age melodrama.
  46. You can boost mediocrity a little, but you cannot raise it from the dead.
  47. Straightforward, droll, brutally honest and arresting.
    • 32 Metascore
    • 50 Critic Score
    Kids should be reasonably diverted for a couple of hours, but odds are they'll have forgotten the whole thing by the next morning.
    • 58 Metascore
    • 70 Critic Score
    True to IMAX form, the high-tech graphics and sounds are great.
  48. Provides some wry chuckles, but much of it is as dark as a Glasgow winter.
  49. It's a pretty scathing satire of reality TV, including itself, which makes it both what it is, and a critique of what it is.
  50. If it weren't for Sharif's extraordinary presence, there wouldn't be a cherishable moment in the movie.
  51. What modest pleasure the film affords is largely thanks to the charisma of its genial stars.
  52. Although the acting is committed and sometimes stirring, most of the characters are about as one-note as the biblical archetypes Martin wants to get away from in the first place. "The Name of the Rose" this ain't.
  53. For a quicker and more startling survey of Hong Kong stunts gone wrong, just check out the blooper clips that conclude any '80s Chan flick.
  54. It's hard to say exactly what the point is to this sour tale.
  55. About as funny as malaria.
  56. To watch Greendale is to understand everything about Neil Young. Like him, it's grungy, honest, disarming and unapologetically original.
  57. A nasty, formulaic and unforgivably obvious procedural.
  58. The movie is still a routine Hollywood high school morality play.
  59. It's a sweet family dramedy whose political undertones don't flatter either capitalism or "democratic socialism."
  60. Controversial, yet undeniably powerful.
  61. A boilerplate melodrama whose good guys and bad guys are so baldly drawn they could have been conceived by Friz Freleng.
  62. The movie's sweet, gentle nature may lack the subtle irony of the "Toy Storys" and "Shreks" of the world, but parents won't be bored.
  63. If you're going to make a gross-out comedy you can't just be gross. You've got to be to be funny as well, or the movie will be DOA. Which is why Eurotrip should be toe-tagged and shoved into the deepest and coldest of video vaults.
  64. Even by Disney's formulaic standards -- is about as cut and dried as the phone book.
  65. May, at times, be deadpan to the point of stiffness, but it's far from dead.
  66. A movie marred by a flaccid script, listless pacing, a plethora of cutesy-poo gags and Ray Romano.
  67. A touching documentary on the immigrant experience -- or at least one very tough slice of it.
  68. The most assured of the three films.
  69. A glorious romantic confection unlike any other in movie history.
  70. The sort of clumsy undertaking that trips up everyone and everything in it.
  71. Possesses an undeniable heart. The bad news is that it will still be buried underneath layers of stale Sandlerisms tomorrow, and the next day, and the next.
  72. Most of the performances are excellent. The scripts, however, are slight and unsurprising.
  73. In this comedy, Cecile misinterprets husband Alain's furtive attempt to have himself medically tested as suspicious extramarital behavior.
  74. In its small, achingly beautiful way, this is the lesson that Osama teaches us: When one human being suffers, it is all of us who share her pain.
  75. A parody of B-movies stupid enough -- and yet with just enough brains -- to appeal to the most discriminating fans of the genre.
  76. Miracle works best when the players are on the ice, shot in a faux-documentary style that uses the now-customary handheld cameras, fast pans and machine-gun edits.
  77. What separates Calvin and Eddie from the typical comic hero -- and each "Barbershop" movie from the standard yuk-fest -- is that these folks know how to back up all the hot air with meaningful action.
  78. The movie isn't only boring; it's troubling:
  79. It's not the sort of film one can be said to enjoy, but it is the sort of film that has the clarity of a dream and lingers for hours.
  80. It may give many viewers a licentious flutter, but the highbrow ingredient -- although it desperately wants to be there -- is missing.
    • 67 Metascore
    • 70 Critic Score
    Thoughtful documentary.
  81. Slow going, but it provides an absorbing glimpse of a rarely seen side of Chinese life.
  82. The most cinematic of the three films. It tells its story in stark, often wordless scenes.
  83. Luckily, life (just like the SAT) has its multiple-choice options. You don't actually have to watch this.
  84. Although the rest of the story plays out with melodramatic predictability, it's timely, not to mention refreshing, to see an affirmation of true love over hot sex, along with a reminder that the two aren't necessarily mutually exclusive.
  85. An insipid potboiler set against the far more enticing surf and sand of Oahu's North Shore.
  86. A thinly written, hoarily cliched story that serves mostly as connective tissue between the movie's chief draw, its dazzling dance sequences.
    • 60 Metascore
    • 60 Critic Score
    The oddest thing about this sweet but not entirely satisfying documentary is how little food is involved.
  87. Forget Tad Hamilton -- this is really a 90-minute date with Kate Bosworth.
  88. Tells a tale of fortitude that comes not from muscle but from the ineffable, bungee-like sinew that is the human spirit.
  89. With a surprisingly unhappy, anti-Hollywood ending that will appeal to those who like things dark.
  90. The writing (by Bill and Cherie Steinkellner) has a non-sentimental appeal for that young preteen (and early teen) crowd that fancies itself too cool for kiddie stuff.
  91. The loudest, trashiest, stupidest, cheesiest celebration of ritualized male aggression of 2004.

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