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 5.2 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
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
De Armas simply doesn’t have a purchase on the cultural affection that Reeves has built over four decades of stardom, and that lack keeps “Ballerina” firmly in the minor leagues for about two-thirds of its running time.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 4, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
It’s a comedy, and a brutally dark one, that draws blood and appalled laughter for two-thirds of its running time before jumping the shark in the final stretch. Once again, a brilliant TV writer finds the compact format of a two-hour movie more challenging than expected.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 2, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
Bring Her Back is close to, but not quite, a triumph of style over substance — foreboding, unnerving and ultimately very gooey in ways that linger like the aftermath of a bad dream yet lack the nightmare cogency of truly great horror.- Washington Post
- Posted May 29, 2025
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Michael O'Sullivan
Karate Kid: Legends combines the best of all those sequels plus a 2010 remake — a simple underdog tale, appealing casts and crisply filmed action — to contribute a new and worthy chapter to the canon. It’s one whose ambitions meet, and occasionally exceed, our expectations.- Washington Post
- Posted May 29, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
The Last Rodeo may not be bodacious, but it’s a satisfying ride.- Washington Post
- Posted May 23, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
It’s a movie designed as functional entertainment, and for lack of a better word it functions.- Washington Post
- Posted May 23, 2025
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Jen Yamato
Despite a snoozer of a pat ending that strains to bring its themes full circle, the live-action iteration at least proves that the franchise, with its notion of ohana and several films, spin-off series and countless plushies sold to date, hasn’t lost all its heft — just its original spark.- Washington Post
- Posted May 23, 2025
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Ann Hornaday
The story, held at well-mannered arm’s length by Piani, never gets too messy; even Agathe’s deepest psychological issues — a phobia that makes travel difficult and, later, the explanation of its traumatic roots — are handled with efficient, unfailingly discrete politesse.- Washington Post
- Posted May 22, 2025
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Ann Hornaday
The Final Reckoning stays true to those core tenets, even if it too often feels baggy and redundant. It’s a nesting doll of life-and-death deadlines within life-and-death deadlines, with one wildly improbable stunt leading to another, even more wildly improbable stunt.- Washington Post
- Posted May 21, 2025
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Michael O'Sullivan
The message of “Deaf President Now!” comes across loud and clear: We will be heard.- Washington Post
- Posted May 16, 2025
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Reviewed by
Michael O'Sullivan
The film has the whiff of easy paycheck. It looks glossy but is empty. It sheds light without gaining insight.- Washington Post
- Posted May 16, 2025
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Ann Hornaday
In an era beset with dizzying setbacks in the ideals it celebrates, Ain’t No Back to a Merry-Go-Round feels particularly necessary right now.- Washington Post
- Posted May 15, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
Friendship is primarily a movie for Robinson’s hardcore fans, but, for the Tim-curious, it serves as an amusing — if haphazard and uneven — introduction to his distinctive sensibility.- Washington Post
- Posted May 15, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
Henry Johnson is unusual for Mamet in that it focuses on the prey. It’s also as close as a movie can get to a filmed play without including your dinner and a ride home.- Washington Post
- Posted May 9, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
Helmed by James Madigan, a second-unit director moving up to the big chair, from a screenplay by Brooks McLaren and D.J. Cotrona, “Fight or Flight” is high-spirited junk, too full of itself at times but mostly content to work out every last variation on a theme: How do you kill someone on an airplane?- Washington Post
- Posted May 9, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
Thanks to its thoughtful protagonists and filmmaker Jeremy Workman, what starts out as a quirky human interest story becomes a profoundly humane portrait of creativity and community.- Washington Post
- Posted May 8, 2025
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Ty Burr
Shakespeare this ain’t. In the long, long history of “Romeo and Juliet” movie adaptations, “Juliet & Romeo” lands well below the 1996 Baz Luhrmann version starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes and just above 2011’s “Gnomeo & Juliet,” in which the characters are portrayed as animated garden gnomes.- Washington Post
- Posted May 8, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
There’s no dazzling CGI in “Words of War” — no stalwart, spandexed action figures flying through the air to land nuclear uppercuts on the villain of the hour. There’s just one woman: Anna Politkovskaya, a Russian journalist who went up against the villain of our age and paid the ultimate price for it.- Washington Post
- Posted May 2, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
Rust, Alec Baldwin and Joel Souza’s slow-moving, sepia-toned homage to the American western, is the kind of respectable if unremarkable genre exercise that would have come and gone without much notice were it not for the circumstances of its making.- Washington Post
- Posted May 1, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
The Surfer feels overthought and underwritten, a cacophony that builds to an undeserved power chord of acceptance, transcendence and retribution.- Washington Post
- Posted May 1, 2025
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Ty Burr
To paraphrase the T-shirt, everyone here went to the Isle of Capri, and all we got was this lousy movie.- Washington Post
- Posted May 1, 2025
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Ann Hornaday
It’s certainly a movie nobody asked for, as Marvel itself acknowledges. But it’s here. And it’s just fine.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 30, 2025
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Jen Yamato
The film also suffers from erratic pacing and half-baked reveals, but at its best, it throbs with raw, human, horrific honesty.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 25, 2025
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Ty Burr
As a director, Minahan knows his way around a track, but on the evidence of this film, he’s not yet ready to run wild.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 24, 2025
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Ty Burr
If you’re up for a film that tells its own tale, rather than the one it thinks you want to hear, this one has a touch of madness to it, and it seems fashioned from love and old parts for people who genuinely don’t want to know what’s going to happen next.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 24, 2025
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Ann Hornaday
Brax’s knuckles may be perpetually bared, but his heart’s always in the right place, which “The Accountant 2” spares nothing to remind us, even while the mayhem escalates into sheer outlandishness.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 23, 2025
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Ty Burr
A remake of Ang Lee’s 1993 film of the same title...the new film is unnecessary as such, but it’s a determinedly openhearted crowd-pleaser with a handful of delicious performances, and it’s just about impossible to dislike.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 17, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ann Hornaday
Sinners gives sensuous, supernatural, often electrifying expression to the belief that we’re all simultaneously captive to our histories and capable of so much more.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 15, 2025
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Ty Burr
Even if such murky doings aren’t your cup of absinthe, the skill with which Guiraudie weaves his web is mesmerizing.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 11, 2025
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Jen Yamato
The Amateur may be off to a rocky start as a spy franchise, but it scores one for the IT crowd.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 11, 2025
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