St. Louis Post-Dispatch's Scores
- Movies
For 770 reviews, this publication has graded:
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64% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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33% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 6.6 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 68
| Highest review score: |
Critic Score
100
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|---|---|
| Lowest review score: |
Critic Score
25
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Score distribution:
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Positive: 580 out of 770
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Mixed: 136 out of 770
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Negative: 54 out of 770
770
movie reviews
- By critic score
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
At once an unforgettable war film and a brilliant character study. -
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
Shot mostly in black and white and imbued with a romanticism that's at once nostalgic and exhilarating, Tetro sneaks up on you. What threatens to be a mere exercise in style proves to be as involving as it is inventive. -
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
A comedy of discomfort -- and one of their (Coen brothers) best, most insightful and most provocative films. -
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
Involves the gradual revelation of the hopes, fears and insecurities of well-observed characters. -
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Reviewed by
Joe Williams 100
Up in the Air may not end up as the best picture -- that will be decided by the Academy -- but it has landed in the middle of the discussion because it's laser-focused and right on time. -
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Reviewed by
Joe Williams 100
The combination of a literate script, an adroit cast and an economical style is simple addition that achieves an alchemical feat: the best film of the year. -
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Reviewed by
Joe Williams 100
An exciting cloak-and-dagger thriller. -
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
A stark, contemplative and hauntingly brilliant film. -
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
Bursting with smart dialogue, surprising situations and humor that springs from richly imagined characters. -
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
The success of the three, separately screened films -- the first set in 1974, the second in 1980 and the concluding segment in 1983 -- depends not on their specifics, but on their ability to sustain an atmosphere that's appropriate to the dark but haunting story. -
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
Essential viewing for art-film buffs and crime-flick fans, but also for anyone who's looking for a great story, terrific acting and masterful filmmaking. -
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
Sophisticated comedies have gone out of fashion, largely because Hollywood finds it easier and more profitable to simply gross out moviegoers. But Please Give has real class -- and for that it deserves our gratitude. -
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
The Kids Are All Right probably could have used a few more scenes to come to an even more satisfying conclusion. But it's a terrific film anyway. -
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
Nev and the filmmakers prove to be charismatic, and at times hilarious, investigators of the unfolding mystery. -
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
An exhilarating balancing act, at once a science-fiction romp, a paranoid thriller and a philosophical treatise.- Posted Mar 4, 2011
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Reviewed by
Joe Williams 100
Beauty comes to us unexpectedly. That's the message of Poetry, a Korean movie about an aging housemaid that turns out to be one of the best films of the year.- Posted Apr 8, 2011
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Reviewed by
Joe Williams 100
The Tree of Life is a religious experience. Overtly. Audaciously. Unashamedly. No film has ever reached as high toward the face of God and, in our commodified future, few are likely to try.- Posted Jun 10, 2011
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- Posted Jun 24, 2011
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Reviewed by
Joe Williams 100
With such supercharged material under the hood, a magnetic man behind the wheel and a nimble director manning the pits, Senna is simply the greatest sports film I have ever seen.- Posted Sep 2, 2011
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
Into the Abyss makes a strong case for the inhumanity of capital punishment, regardless of the crime or the criminal.- Posted Nov 23, 2011
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- Posted Jan 20, 2012
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
The result, Pina, is the most spirited and spectacular film about dance since Robert Altman's "The Company."- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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Reviewed by
Joe Williams 100
That action is bloody, but Fiennes' choices as director are unassailably apt and artful. Coriolanus is a triumph.- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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Reviewed by
Joe Williams 100
The best film of the year and perhaps the purest love story in cinematic history.- Posted Jun 8, 2012
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Reviewed by
Joe Williams 100
Not just a reboot - it's a rejuvenation. From the first image of sensory awakening to the final acceptance of adult responsibility, it pulses with the warm blood of a very human hero.- Posted Jul 2, 2012
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Reviewed by
Joe Williams 100
The conclusion of Christopher Nolan's superhero trilogy is a hugely ambitious mix of eye candy and brain food. If it doesn't have the haunting aftertaste of the previous serving, that's only because Nolan couldn't clone Heath Ledger. But beefy substitute Tom Hardy is a hell of a villain.- Posted Jul 19, 2012
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Reviewed by
Calvin Wilson 100
A cinematic miracle, a film that carves out a vivid space that has nothing to do with wizards or extraterrestrials, but quite a lot to say about the fantastical creatures that roam through the humanity in us all.- Posted Jul 20, 2012
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- Posted Aug 24, 2012
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