Rolling Stone's Scores
- Movies
- Music
For 1,938 reviews, this publication has graded:
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59% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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39% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 64
Highest review score: |
Critic Score
100
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Lowest review score: |
Critic Score
0
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Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,258 out of 1938
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Mixed: 347 out of 1938
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Negative: 333 out of 1938
1,938
movie reviews
- By critic score
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Fighter shapes up as one of the great documentaries of this year, or any other. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Starting with the outrageous and building from there, he ignites a slight love-on-the-run novel, creating a bonfire of a movie that confirms his reputation as the most exciting and innovative filmmaker of his generation. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Like the music, the film is outspoken, roaringly funny, defiantly sexual and relentlessly in your face. I couldn't have liked it more. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Taut, tense and enthralling, as smart and surprising as it protagonist. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
The last days of guilt-free glitz had consequences for more than two white chicks and their boyfriends, and Stillman shows how with delicious malice and unexpected compassion. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Director Richard Eyre has struck gold. Twice. Dench and Winslet are a riveting matchup. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Scorches the screen with a badass bravado all its own. Smart, sexy, funny and dangerous this high-wire act is a movie and a half. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Savor their technique and the sizzling performances of Frances McDormand as an adulterous wife, Dan Hedaya as her vengeful husband and M. Emmet Walsh as a private detective from hell. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Logue hits every note of humor and heart in his breakthrough role. Don't miss him. He's that good. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
In uniting to honor Arenas, Bardem and Schnabel create something extraordinary. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Paradis sizzles in a star-making role that gleams like one of Gabor's blades. She's a spellbinder. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
The House of Mirth is not one of those teacup and doily movies; it's harsh and disturbing. Davies does superlatively right by Wharton. There's blood on the walls. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
It's a wild, whacked-out wonder. Coenheads rejoice. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
A movie of prodigious power and feeling that is also high-spirited, hilarious and scorchingly erotic. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
What makes it such a mesmerizing, wickedly witty entertainment is the revealing portrait it paints of an era in which everyone is presumed guilty where greed is concerned... It's an often chilly movie, but the chill cuts to the bone. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
There may be bigger, costlier, weighter films this year. There's none lovelier. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Part of the miracle of Robert Altman's triumphantly fierce, funny, moving and innovative Short Cuts is that you can't get this movie out of your head. You keep playing it back to savor its formula-smashing audacity, its peerless performances and its cleareyed view of blasted lives. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Stupendously exciting and emotionally engulfing... With probing intelligence and passionate feeling, Cameron has raised the adventure film very close to the level of art. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Recoing gives a performance that won't soon be forgotten. Neither will Time Out. It's a great movie. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
A ravishing, romantic lark brimming over with style, intelligence and flashing wit. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
This volcanically funny and seriously scary look at America's obsession with guns is meant to shake us up good. And it does. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
It's the Pixar animators who keep grown-ups as riveted as the kids with visual marvels that dazzle and delight. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Has the juice to get its hooks into you, knock you off balance and keep you that way for two hours. It's a triumph for director Sam Mendes. The passion and precision of his Road work is staggering. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
This stuff is golden. Directors Brett Morgan and Nanette Burstein make sure the movie goes down like potato chips. It's great fun and compulsively watchable. And don't leave before Dustin Hoffman makes a hilarious appearance as the credits roll. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
Sensational, sicko fun -- you won't believe your eyes -- and just the thing to shake up the creeping conservatism that is draining the vulgar life out of pop culture. -
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Reviewed by
Peter Travers 100
This is the untamed Apocalypse that Coppola envisioned in 1979 before money and mental pressures made him fear he had created something too long, too weird and too morally demanding for the masses. -
