It’s the flip side of the oft-heard charge, most recently lodged by “Gods of Egypt” director Alex Proyas, that critics are afraid to stand out from the herd: “Lock a critic in a room with a movie no one has even seen and they will not know what to make of it,” Proyas wrote. On social media, some hit Renshaw with the accusation of writing a contrary take on “Zootopia” for the attention, and indeed, Renshaw’s review is, at the moment, the most-read article on City Weekly’s site. Are you proud to be the only one of 113 Rotten Tomatoes reviewers to give this film a negative score?” You clearly wanted to be the first person to ruin the movies 100% and so you lowered yourself to the level of internet Troll. “You should lose your Top Critic status at Rotten Tomatoes for this asinine poor review. Here are some of the fun comments from Kate Taylor’s review in the Globe and Mail:
The complaints you mentioned in your review can subjectively be viewed as legitimate, however they aren’t enough to objectively ‘fail’ a movie.” You’re complaints sound so petty and minor, it’s the reason why everyone finds no credibility in your reviews. “To the TWO reviewers that gave this film a bad rating: Really? Roughly two scenes (at the most) left a bad enough taste in your mouth to give this movie less than 3/5 stars? You’re basically saying that less than 5 minutes of the movie is enough to warrant a failing grade (60%). The 15 Best Spy Movies, from 'Enemy of the State' to 'North by Northwest'įrom 'Barbie' to 'Babylon,' Here's Everything Margot Robbie Has in the Works 'Citizen Kane' Loses Its Perfect Rotten Tomatoes Score After 1941 Negative Review Resurfaces Rotten Tomatoes Launches RT Labs, Online Educational Program for Aspiring and Rising Critics “out of 122 reviews, two people said it’s rotten….you’re a dumbass”