Critic scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating more favorable reviews.
Against the odds, John Carter is itself pretty amazing - an epic pulp saga that slowly rises to the level of its best imitations and wins you over by degrees. Read full review
Director Andrew Stanton's Disney extravaganza is a rather charming pastiche. Read full review
John Carter bites off more than even Woola can chew, but it's built on something rare: wonder instead of Hollywood cynicism. Read full review
That's kind of the aesthetic that Stanton is going for: over-the-top pulp. But there's something generic about the digitally rendered Martians, and there's a corniness to the dialogue that keeps the audience from any kind of emotional attachment to the Tharks and Zodangans and their ilk. Read full review
What director Andrew Stanton has brought forth from Burroughs' limited, hoary source material is actually kind of fun. Read full review
When Stanton lets the film be pure popcorn entertainment, with swashbuckling set pieces and lovably corny romanticism, it's a great ride in the Indiana Jones tradition. Read full review
Though the project, based on the Edgar Rice Burroughs novel "A Princess of Mars," is ambitious, it's also bloated, dreary and humorless. Read full review
This new Disney film, marked by myriad lapses and marketing follies, bears the woefully familiar earmarks of a big studio production that was pulled and hauled every which way until it lost all shape and flavor. Read full review
The opening to John Carter is a dud, a battle between airships made of woven bamboo, bursting into computer-generated flame over a sandy terrain. There's nothing to see, nothing to think about, nothing to care about, and nothing to feel, just emptiness. The emptiness is never filled over the course of 132 long, barren minutes. Read full review
Nothing in John Carter really works, since everything in the movie has been done so many times before, and so much better. Read full review
4.0
Dave White Profile
The first great summer movie of March. Read full review
Set Visit: A Day on Mars with John Carter and the Aliens After 80 years of failed attempts, the film adaptation finally comes to life—and we’re there to see it firsthand. Exclusive Cast Interviews Taylor Kitsch and Lynn Collins talks about being competitive on set, Dominic West and Willem Dafoe discuss the physical nature of acting and Andrew Stanton recounts how he first heard about John Carter. John Carter Movie Guide