“Netflix spent huge amounts of money on this feature, and it ended up getting tanked by reviews on Rotten Tomatoes.”
Rotten Tomatoes isn’t a source of truth. If you go by the critics it’s only 71% despite being well written and historically accurate (say, well, historians).
It has become the Twitter of review sites.
“Unfortunately we get Michael Douglas miscast as being a Ben Franklin”
This line is repeated ad nauseum.
They didn’t watch it.
https://www.giantfreakinrobot.com/ent/atlas-netflix-rotten-tomatoes-bomb.html
@feloneouscat High score tend to go to well done "feel good" movies. They may not be anyone's favorite, but they have a broader appeal to the range of critics polled.
I look at it as a probability you won't be sorry you committed time to watch it. It doesn't mean an individual will like a 98% movie more than a 60% movie.
Hell, even if it get a crappy score, like 20%, you might be in that 20% that liked it.
Too many look at the score like a test score. It is just a way to aggregate opinions.
@feloneouscat When in doubt, scan the actual critic articles. Drill down.
FWIW, Atlas seems to be panned by men and women critics alike. The few who liked it characterized as a "good B-movie.." Most seem to blame a bad script over the actors.
The audience score is higher at 55% recommending Atlas. But 55% isn't good comparably.
We are allowed to like things others don't, but it doesn't mean the consensus opinion is invalid either.