Home » Highest to Lowest Rated Movies
Cedar Rapids is about a man who must come out of his shell to stand up for what he believes is the right thing to do. Always raunchy, often...
Pawel Pawlikowski returns after an eight-year hiatus with The Woman in the Fifth, a thriller that moves at a snail-like pace despite its 80 minute runtime. While its two...
If there is one thing Ulrich Seidl is the master of, it is getting a reaction out of his audience. Whether or not it is a positive one is...
The production of Black Rock is a husband and wife collaboration between Mark Duplass handling the screenwriting duties and Katie Aselton coming up with the story and working as...
At the start of A Master Builder, successful architect Halvard Solness (Wallace Shawn) is on his death bed. He looks weak, until a conversation with fellow architect Knut (André...
The Kid with a Bike is an independent French film written and directed by brothers Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne about an abandoned adolescent boy who refuses to believe...
Directed by Laura Thies, Surviving Family is an indie film about a dysfunctional family and the struggles of facing the truths behind its troubled past. Accompanying the film is...
Lasse Hallström’s Salmon Fishing in the Yemen is about having faith even if you do not believe in it. That in itself are wise words to live by; but...
Premiering as the Closing Night film at the Cannes film festival last year was Claude Miller’s final film (before passing away) Thérèse. Adapted from a novel of the same...
Mr. Nobody is proof that just having all the right ingredients does not automatically make it a great dish. This film contains an intriguing plot, spectacular visuals, solid acting...
When you consider Out of the Furnace is packed with a star-studded cast and a director who demonstrated outstanding talent in his previous film (Crazy Heart), it is disappointing...
The Rock n Roll Dream of Duncan Christopher is an indie film that feels like an Oklahoma version of Flight of the Conchords about karaoke. The film is about...
Hermano tells the story of two young men, Julio and Daniel, who are raised as brothers and have the unfortunate task of growing up in the very dangerous slums...
British filmmaker Simon Aboud makes his full length debut as a director and writer of the indie film Comes a Bright Day. The film is a bizarre blend of...
In what will more than likely go down as the biggest disappointment of the year in film for me, Jacques Audiard’s Rust and Bone isn’t something that I would...
Perhaps the point of the film is to have no point, but it feels like more of a cop out than any real revelation.
The director that made Thank You For Smoking, Juno, and Up in the Air switches gears with his new film, Labor Day, which slows down its pace and trades...
Émile Zola’s definitive novel Thérèse Raquin has been translated to screen and stage too many times to count. Perhaps because it’s the definitive tale of forbidden lust gone way,...
Crispian Mills’ A Fantastic Fear of Everything, while it falls short of being fantastic itself, offers a character study in what it is like to be an individual coming to...
Watch if you're a fan of Juliette Binoche or Kristen Stewart, but this soapy opera full of flat notes is not worth your time.
The mob drama may be played out, but that doesn’t stop writer/director Joe Basile from taking a crack at the all too familiar genre. West End takes place in...
If you ask any film buff to rattle off a list of 10 great Al Pacino films, or if you avoid social interaction and just Google it, several crime...
The Color of Time is a film for students; its heavily filtered aesthetic and non-linear structure will appeal far more to the artistic undergraduate than the average cinema-goer.
The path to fame is splattered in blood in this Hollywood-based horror film.
And you thought you were obsessed with the holidays?
A perpetually underwhelming underdog sports movie that doesn't do the true story justice.
McFarland, USA is a good-intentioned youth-sports movie and yet another minority tale told from a white man's perspective.
A dirge-like film that strips an inspirational true story of all life and drama.
A couple's failing marriage is put in contrast with a young couple they meet on a trip to Italy.
'Kung Fu Killer' is a moderately entertaining martial arts take on the serial killer procedural.
A comedy focusing on four discontented thirty-somethings facing the hard truths of their lives during a night of fun.
An incoherent mess, a mesmerizing bore, and yet strangely compelling, 'Roar' has to be seen to be believed but is hard to recommend.
Social awkwardness fails to add to a stagnant romantic comedy.
Peyton's natural disaster flick is destructively satisfying but emotionally tame.
A semi-biographical drama featuring Dylan Thomas struggles to find its own narrative poetry.
The cast assembled for this parody of underdog sports stories keeps Balls Out amusing through its tedious plot.
An exploration of the mundane unable to transcend the tedium of its character's lives.
By eschewing the most interesting parts of Escobar's life, this fact-based thriller misses the real story.
A child prodigy and his obsessive teacher make for a hauntingly evocative but ambiguous tale.
This one-take wonder isn't likely to be remembered for anything other than being one long take.