For 11,478 reviews, this publication has graded:
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46% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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52% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 5.4 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 60
| Highest review score: | Oppenheimer | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Dolittle |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 6,014 out of 11478
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Mixed: 3,069 out of 11478
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Negative: 2,395 out of 11478
11478
movie
reviews
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- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Michael O'Sullivan
Someone forgot to remind Duvall to write an ending.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Rita Kempley
This sloppily made, poky, extra cheesy adventure is virtually a remake of "Armageddon."- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Rita Kempley
Though the comedy falls short of a debacle -- which is what such egocentric projects tend to be -- it isn't as sharp, fast or funny as Rock's stand-up routines.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
As it stands, this movie seems to have conflicting desires: to endear itself to the audience and then repel it.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Rita Kempley
Sure it's slight, but also as cute as the curly tail on its tender protagonist.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
There's not much zest here, even with Mike Myers's energetic attempts to steal the movie as a cross-eyed flight instructor.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
The movie, which Carion wrote with Eric Assous, has a calming quality. The story moves slowly but, given the milieu and pace of life, this seems perfectly appropriate.- Washington Post
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Stephen Hunter
All in all -- well, there is no all in all. There are just parts. Some fit, some don't. Some are cool, some aren't. It's the craziest thing you ever saw.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
Has so little going for it, you wonder if you've missed something.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Michael O'Sullivan
The title (which translates, essentially, as "burned out") is an apt description of the film itself: a hot and smoldering shell.- Washington Post
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Rita Kempley
You seldom leave a theater walking on air, much less float all through a movie. But the joyous Bend It Like Beckham never lets you down.- Washington Post
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Ann Hornaday
McDormand is the best thing about Laurel Canyon. She's also the most unfortunate victim of a film that seems unable or unwilling to give even its most intriguing and compulsively watchable character her due.- Washington Post
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What rescues the film is Gernot Roll's spare, almost aesthetic cinematography, and the quality of the acting.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Rita Kempley
The rare film that is capable of offending both Trent Lott and Al Sharpton.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Philip Kennicott
None of them is nasty enough to be interesting, nor nice enough to be sympathetic.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
Fails because of its gratuitous rape and violence and also because of its pretentious and intellectually one-dimensional grounds, which make the violence at the end feel even worse.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
This is an odd amalgam of bleeding-heart sentimentality and over-the-top guts-and-glory action. You're not sure how to feel. But you're certainly not as moved and stunned as you were in "Black Hawk Down."- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
Shows us, in an extraordinarily simple way, the hopes and frustrations of one woman's life.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Rita Kempley
It's saying something when Tom Arnold's performance is among the movie's highlights.- Washington Post
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Michael O'Sullivan
A thoughtful and surprisingly affecting portrait of a screwed-up man who dared to mess with some powerful people, seen through the eyes of the idealistic kid who chooses to champion his ultimately losing cause.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Rita Kempley
Like the director, the cast seems to have burrowed into the material, made all the more wrenchingly realistic by Dogme precepts.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
I'd recommend you actively or passively forget this one.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Michael O'Sullivan
Less a movie than a meticulously, tediously accurate Civil War reenactment committed to celluloid.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Rita Kempley
A dumb guy comedy about dumb guys by dumb guys and for dumb guys.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Rita Kempley
Another tediously sanctimonious message movie from Alan Parker.- Washington Post
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Philip Kennicott
Viewers will leave Amandla! moved by the music, impressed by the musicians and dubious about the possibility of political and social healing.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
The documentary never gets more than skin deep. It rarely delves into the troubling regions that are the very orchards of documentary.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
It is quietly observant, with a detached eye for the telling moment, and the visual compositions are often exquisite.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Michael O'Sullivan
The franchise is cheapened by Disney's crass commercialism in releasing material that, by rights, should have gone straight to video.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
The most screamingly obvious reaction to Gerry is: what a load of pseudo-arty you-know-what.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
It's a movie of deft impressions and telling human moments. Whether or not those impressions and moments add up to anything is almost beside the point.- Washington Post
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Stephen Hunter
For the most part, Daredevil doesn't take a single dare; it travels the road much trod, even if it's through the midtown air.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
One-dimensional archetypes, too much predictability and not enough comedy.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
Both lead players are appealing and attractive enough to make an otherwise tepid movie at least un-excruciating.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
It's too bad Chan's imagination and delicacy were wasted in this movie.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
In visual terms, it's clear McKee has a talent for moviemaking...But he's going to need better stories than this.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
Like rubbernecking motorists, we can't help but watch with lurid fascination.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Stephen Hunter
It's nothing but style and noise, threadbare of content, empty of ideas. Is it anything? Not really.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
It's not every day that movies present a Teutonic character in SS uniform as an unambiguously moral hero, so enjoy this rarity. And the film.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
Tries desperately to lower the bar for scatological gags, rank sexual humor and cheap physical shots.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
To call Lawrence a poor man's Richard Pryor libels not just Pryor but also the 33 million Americans currently living under the poverty line.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
There are two distinctive features to the movie: the mind-numbingly banal plot as one chases another who chases another, and all the offensive material.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
One of the most startling, grittily brilliant films in recent years.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
You know a movie is in trouble when its biggest laughs come not from its lead players but from a dog and a car- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Stephen Hunter
A picture that is surely one of the oddest ever made.- Washington Post
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Ann Hornaday
Sadly, the filmmakers haven't given viewers enough context or information about their protagonist to know whether he's utterly free or utterly unmoored -– or to care very much either way.- Washington Post
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Ann Hornaday
Whether the entire production comes off as classy or cloying depends entirely on the viewer's mood.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
With its deft intercutting of place and time, the film creates a powerful sense of mysticism and fate.- Washington Post
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Stephen Hunter
A beautiful story, told in measured cadences by a master of old-timey narrative compression and expression.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
Not since the 1972 'Cabaret' has there been a movie musical this stirring, intelligent and exciting.- Washington Post
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Stephen Hunter
It's brilliantly acted. But best of all, it's brilliantly made.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
Pleasant enough and its ecological, pro-wildlife sentiments are certainly welcome.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Michael O'Sullivan
A numbingly unfunny romantic comedy. I hated every minute of it- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
As Morvern, Morton is disconcertingly enigmatic, often bordering on catatonic. But she carries the movie effortlessly. And even though we're on the outside looking in, she carries us along, too.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Stephen Hunter
An eensy-weensy movie sustained by two utterly gigantic performances.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
This is a stirring movie, if relentless intensity, handheld camera work, cover-your-eyes violence and ear-splitting yelling matches are what you're craving.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Stephen Hunter
Under its scope and reach and passion, Gangs of New York is pretty ordinary stuff.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
Blessedly free of the self-righteous histrionics and sentimentality that so often cheapen powerful personal stories.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
It's the usual undisciplined, overextended Spike symphony: more fun than it is any good.- Washington Post
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Stephen Hunter
Gripping, whole and nourishing. Certainly of the fantasy film series currently in American theaters -– I include "Harry Potter and the Secret Toity" and "Star Trek: Halitosis" -– The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers is the best, and not by just a little.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Stephen Hunter
An Upper West Sidey exercise in narcissism and self-congratulation disguised as a tribute.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
As vivid as many scenes are, there are just as many that seem taken directly out of the Cute Irish Movie notebook.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Michael O'Sullivan
This fairy-tale shtick, even when dressed up with a little class-war garnish, is hard to swallow.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Michael O'Sullivan
An offering so endearingly lame it seems to have missed the past 10 years' worth of special-effects breakthroughs.- Washington Post
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Ann Hornaday
Consistently absorbing -- thanks in large part to strong performances from the actors -- but not particularly rewarding.- Washington Post
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Michael O'Sullivan
Shakes, rattles and rolls the house, building to a climax that makes you almost forget you're in a movie theater and not a football stadium at halftime.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
What gives About Schmidt its ultimate boost, what pushes it into the stirring heavens is Nicholson, who produces the most understated -– and one of the most powerful –- performances of his career.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
So dull and awful, you actually wonder if this is some kind of Andy Kaufmanesque in-joke, a deliberate attempt to douse the spark that made the original film so enjoyable.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Stephen Hunter
Equilibrium is like a remake of "1984" by someone who's seen "The Matrix" 25 times while eating Twinkies and doing methamphetamines.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Desson Thomson
May not be the first movie to examine the creative process. But it's the most playfully brilliant.- Washington Post
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Ann Hornaday
Searing dramatization of a story of remarkable courage, stamina and spirit.- Washington Post
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Stephen Hunter
For the truth is, given the audacity, the organization, the seriousness of purpose, the movie isn't nearly as provocative as you think it might be.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Stephen Hunter
It could hardly be called rip-roaring. I should report that it drives about a quarter of the audience out of the theater before it is half over. That's because it's slower than molasses in Siberia.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
In this vile contribution to the animated holiday genre, Sandler proves himself once again determined to get rich by setting the bar just a little bit lower each time out.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
Beginning to creak not only with age but with the strain of constant self-one-upmanship in giving us exotic locales, explosive geopolitics and unbelievable stunts.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Stephen Hunter
Embraces reality, humanity and compassion, as leavened by wisdom and wit.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Stephen Hunter
It's a simpering, ineffective ersatz-drama, so simple-minded and unrealistic and so full of fussy stupidity, it exiles you.- Washington Post
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Desson Thomson
Thanks to Caine's subtly nuanced performance, there's a deeper dimension to everything. He's snappily ironic at times, sometimes amazingly delicate, always engaging.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by
Michael O'Sullivan
Its important if inflammatory message will bore all but Chomsky's fellow travelers to death.- Washington Post
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Ann Hornaday
A movie of technical skill and rare depth of intellect and feeling.- Washington Post
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Reviewed by