Charlotte Observer's Scores
- Movies
For 1,355 reviews, this publication has graded:
-
55% higher than the average critic
-
3% same as the average critic
-
42% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1.9 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 64
| Highest review score: |
Critic Score
100
|
|---|---|
| Lowest review score: |
Critic Score
0
|
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 869 out of 1355
-
Mixed: 233 out of 1355
-
Negative: 253 out of 1355
1,355
movie reviews
- By critic score
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Supplies the three key elements of the best political thrillers: suspense, credibility and the feeling that you're really sitting in the Oval Office. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Turn a potentially unforgettable movie into a broad crowd-pleaser that sustains itself on three acting performances. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Grosser than "American Pie"! More penis jokes than "There''s Something About Mary"! Nudity more gratuitous than "Porky''s"! -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
You won't forget Nobody Knows, the quietly harrowing tale of four abandoned Japanese children. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
It's fascinating to watch others sweat, suffer and triumph in the documentary Dust to Glory, which chronicles the longest nonstop, point-to-point race on our planet. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Raymond Wong, who has become Chow's favorite composer, iced this cake with music that sounds like Beethoven, Henry Mancini's jazz and all the James Bond themes run together in a blender. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
A high-wire act, treading a thin line of truth between hokum and homilies. You hold your breath, waiting to see if the filmmakers misstep, but they never do. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Bloom finally comes into his own as a man here, somberly thoughtful and melancholic. The elfin archer of "The Lord of the Rings" and the trivial boy-toy of "Troy" have been forgotten. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
The two male leads, bulwarks of the Danish film industry for more than a decade, play off each other like the veterans they are. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
These kids may be too small for sports and may not be headed to college on academic scholarships. But for once, they've proven to the world and to themselves that they matter. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Doesn't reveal all its layers until you've taken the last bite. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
The animals' personalities have been carefully calibrated: They have sufficient edge to amuse us as characters, yet they're cuddly enough to market as plush toys or action figures. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
The best action movie of the month contains chase scenes, fights, a love story, exotic locations - well, one exotic locale, snow-blasted Antarctica - and a battle for survival against long odds amid brutal conditions. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Bizarrely entertaining and brilliantly designed. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Cinematographer Cesar Charlone, whose burnt-orange view of the favela made "City of God" striking, conveys Africa's slums with equal force in somber browns and simmering yellows. At times, the inhabitants seem to be on fire in their surroundings, a fitting image for a land consigned to a hell of unhappiness. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Whedon wants to make a Serenity trilogy, and I suspect the actors will grow on me if he does. In this case, familiarity would breed not contempt but comfort. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
It's a gentle look at people who cut themselves off from others and realize consequences too late. If Southern Baptists believed in karma, this would be their touchstone. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
The plot is thin: You'll guess the villain early, then pick holes in story construction. But Black's ear for mock-noir speeches doesn't fail him, and he gleefully parodies the chase scenes that dominated his action movies. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
It's a unique vision of war from the point of view of a Marine who never pulled a trigger against a foe. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
A wicked comedy with just the mildest amount of pathos to season the blend. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Allen, rejuvenated by foreign settings, makes us appreciate posh parts of England as he always did Manhattan. (Credit cinematographer Remi Adefarasin for showing us how seductive upper-crust London can be.) -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Haneke peels back the layers of Georges Laurent as slowly and dispassionately as a scientist dissecting a diseased mouse. The ending arrives with the power and inevitability of Greek drama. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
Portman doesn't catch fire until the second half, then heaves herself into emotional action; this suits her initially passive, mostly unthinking character. Weaving, who acts entirely with his voice, is V's ideal embodiment: witty, rueful, pitiless, visionary and mad. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
The film was reputedly inspired by Japanese teens who trolled chat rooms to find predators, made assignments, then ganged up to beat offending adults. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
A crackling rendition of Dan Brown's novel, siphoning off unneeded fat and fancy and leaving us with a streamlined train of a picture that never stops moving. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
On the most basic level, Cars is an old-fashioned fable about an egotistical, talented loner who learns humility and redeems himself by helping unfortunates. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman 88
When I first heard about Wordplay, I assumed I wouldn't have an ort of interest. -