Students are often asked to write reviews of various texts—including films, articles, fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and even advertisements—to analyze the text’s central ideas and purpose. 

A good review starts with a summary, but it does not end there. It should demonstrate not only understanding of the material, but also critical thinking. This is shown by analyzing the stylistic and rhetorical choices the creator made, then making judgments—backed up by evidence from the text—about how successful those choices are in communicating with the audience. 

Getting Started

Here are some points to consider and questions to ask while preparing to write a critical review of a work in any medium:

A reviewer’s opinion of the text often changes during the analysis process. After finishing the first draft, a reviewer’s reflection on the text as a whole and the review’s cohesiveness—how well its various parts stick together—often leads to a deeper and more thorough level of analysis that can lead to a significant revision of the review.

Below are some questions to help start the critical thinking process.

Films

Articles

Fiction (Story or Novel)

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Conclusion

A critical media review depends on more than just a summary and a statement of whether the reviewer found the work good or bad. A critical media review should analyze the work using criteria that are appropriate to the type of media. It should also answer questions about what aspects are important, what the creator's intent was, and whether the work successfully fulfilled this intent. 

Remember, it is not necessary to be an expert on a topic or medium to write a good review. The key is to think critically about the main points in the material: what they are, what they might mean, and how different audiences might react.