For 4,012 reviews, this critic has graded:
  • 75% higher than the average critic
  • 2% same as the average critic
  • 23% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 12 points higher than other critics. (0-100 point scale)

Roger Ebert's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
Average review score: 71
Highest review score:
Critic Score 100
Lowest review score:
Critic Score 0
Score distribution:
4,012 movie reviews
    • Metascore: 87
    • Roger Ebert 100
    One of the most remarkable and haunting documentaries ever made.
    • Metascore: 64
    • Roger Ebert 100
    In a time when our cities are wounded, movies like Grand Canyon can help to heal.
    • Metascore: 75
    • Roger Ebert 100
    An Officer and a Gentleman is the best movie about love that I've seen in a long time.
    • Metascore: 86
    • Roger Ebert 100
    As he is played by Gene Hackman in The Conversation, an expert wiretapper named Harry Caul is one of the most affecting and tragic characters in the movies.
    • Metascore: 77
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Bernardo Bertolucci's Last Tango in Paris is one of the great emotional experiences of our time.
    • Metascore: 82
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Drugstore Cowboy is one of the best films in the long tradition of American outlaw road movies - a tradition that includes "Bonnie and Clyde," "Easy Rider," "Midnight Cowboy" and "Badlands."
    • Metascore: 76
    • Roger Ebert 100
    This is, first of all, an electrifying and poignant love story....And it is also one hell of a thriller.
    • Metascore: 65
    • Roger Ebert 100
    The Year of Living Dangerously is a wonderfully complex film about personalities more than events, and we really share the feeling of living in that place, at that time.
    • Metascore: 78
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Body Heat is good enough to make film noir play like we hadn't seen it before.
    • Metascore: 77
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Kramer vs. Kramer is a movie of good performances, and it had to be, because the performances can't rest on conventional melodrama.
    • Metascore: 79
    • Roger Ebert 100
    This is a wonderful film. There isn't a thing that I would change.
    • Metascore: 65
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Scarface is one of those special movies, like "The Godfather," that is willing to take a flawed, evil man and allow him to be human.
    • Metascore: 87
    • Roger Ebert 100
    This movie gets you coming and going.
    • Metascore: 67
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Sophie's Choice is a fine, absorbing, wonderfully acted, heartbreaking movie.
    • Metascore: 80
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Here is a film that engaged me on the subject of Christ's dual nature, that caused me to think about the mystery of a being who could be both God and man. I cannot think of another film on a religious subject that has challenged me more fully. The film has offended those whose ideas about God and man it does not reflect. But then, so did Jesus.
    • Metascore: 66
    • Roger Ebert 100
    It takes on the resonance of classic tragedy. Tragedy requires the fall of a hero, and one of the achievements of Nixon is to show that greatness was within his reach.
    • Metascore: 75
    • Roger Ebert 100
    The very best thing about the movie is its dialogue. Paul Brickman, who wrote and directed, has an ear so good that he knows what to leave out.
    • Metascore: 64
    • Roger Ebert 100
    That could have been a good movie, but predictable. Mike Nichols' Silkwood is not predictable.... We realize this is a lot more movie than perhaps we were expecting.
    • Metascore: 74
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Like all good satirists, he knows that too much realism will weaken his effect. He lets you know he's making a comedy. There's an over-the-top exuberance to the intricate crosscut editing and to the hyperactive camera.
    • Metascore: 75
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Nothing Cruise has done will prepare you for what he does in Born on the Fourth of July. His performance is so good that the movie lives through it. Stone is able to make his statement with Cruise's face and voice and doesn't need to put everything into the dialogue.
    • Metascore: 71
    • Roger Ebert 100
    JFK
    Stone and his editors, Joe Hutshing and Pietro Scalia, have somehow triumphed over the tumult of material here and made it work - made it grip and disturb us.
    • Metascore: 74
    • Roger Ebert 100
    After seeing Awakenings, I read it, to know more about what happened in that Bronx hospital. What both the movie and the book convey is the immense courage of the patients and the profound experience of their doctors, as in a small way they reexperienced what it means to be born, to open your eyes and discover to your astonishment that "you" are alive.
    • Metascore: 77
    • Roger Ebert 100
    The funniest American comedy of the year.
    • Metascore: 86
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Someday it was inevitable that a great film would come along, utilizing the motorcycle genre, the same way the great Westerns suddenly made everyone realize they were a legitimate American art form, Easy Rider is the picture.
    • Metascore: 63
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Arthur Penn's Little Big Man is an endlessly entertaining attempt to spin an epic in the form of a yarn.
    • Metascore: 84
    • Roger Ebert 100
    The interesting thing is that Hiller has saved the movie without substantially changing anything in the book.
    • Metascore: 65
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Apart from its pure entertainment value - this is the best American crime movie in years - it is an important statement about a time and a condition that should not be forgotten. The Academy loves to honor prestigious movies in which long-ago crimes are rectified in far-away places. Here is a nominee with the ink still wet on its pages.
    • Metascore: 82
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Ron Howard's Parenthood is a delicate balancing act between comedy and truth, a movie that contains a lot of laughter and yet is more concerned with character than punch lines.
    • Metascore: 67
    • Roger Ebert 100
    In a movie with the energy of this one, we're exhilarated by the sheer freedom of movement; the violence becomes surrealistic and less important than the movie's underlying energy level.
    • Metascore: 84
    • Roger Ebert 100
    Broadcast News has a lot of interesting things to say about television. But the thing it does best is look into a certain kind of personality and a certain kind of relationship.