The films that start arguments at dinner parties and spark 10,000-word Reddit threads.
Published March 23, 2026 · ThumbScore Editorial
The history of cinema is littered with movies that split people right down the middle. These aren't movies that are universally loved or universally hated; these are the films that start arguments at dinner parties and spark 10,000-word Reddit threads. The gap between what critics praise as "art" and what audiences dismiss as "boring" (or vice versa) tells us a lot about how we consume media.
Here are some of the most fascinating examples of the Audience vs. Critic divide:
Critics hated the juvenile, absurd humor of Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly playing middle-aged men acting like children. They called it mean-spirited and plotless. Audiences, however, turned Step Brothers into one of the most quoted comedies of the 21st century. It is the ultimate example of critics missing the joke.
Perhaps the most famous recent example of the divide. Critics overwhelmingly praised Rian Johnson's subversion of Star Wars tropes, awarding it a massive 90%+ score. A massive, vocal segment of the audience violently rejected The Last Jedi, driving the audience score into the 40s. It proved that subverting expectations is a risky game when dealing with beloved IP.
Critics dragged this superhero origin story over the coals, comparing it to the worst of the early 2000s comic book movies. Audiences completely ignored them, awarding Venom an 80%+ approval rating because Tom Hardy arguing with a CGI symbiote was undeniably, aggressively fun.
With a dismal critic score, you'd think this vigilante thriller was unwatchable. Instead, audiences embraced The Boondock Saints for its stylized, slow-motion gunfights and Willem Dafoe's unhinged performance, turning it into a massive cult classic.
Critics hailed Adam Sandler's anxiety-inducing performance as a masterpiece of modern cinema. But the general audience score for Uncut Gems was surprisingly low. Why? Because the movie is intentionally exhausting. Many viewers felt physically stressed and deeply uncomfortable watching Howard Ratner make terrible decisions for two hours.
The existence of these massive divides proves that the "Tomatometer" is flawed. A single, aggregated percentage cannot capture the nuance of a divisive film. That's why ThumbScore focuses on the raw audience sentiment. We want to know if the movie is going to entertain you, not if it's going to win an Oscar.
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