They replaced boring stars with a (resembling a police or collegiate badge). A green shield meant "Go for it," and a red shield meant "Stay away." In a world of grey ratings, this binary-color psychology worked wonders. The Rating Scale: What the Numbers Mean Behindwoods uses a scale of 0.5 to 5 . However, unlike Hollywood aggregators like Rotten Tomatoes, Behindwoods ratings are not a percentage of positive reviews; they are the specific critic’s feeling translated into a number.
The joke in the industry is: "If you get a 2.75 from Behindwoods, you are neither a hit nor a flop—you are stuck in review purgatory." behindwoods movie rating
behindwoods-movie-rating-system-explained They replaced boring stars with a (resembling a
| Rating | Color | Translation for the Audience | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Green (Bright) | Blockbuster. Almost perfect. Rarely given. (e.g., Jailer , Vikram , Karnan ). | | 3.0 – 3.75 | Green (Mild) | Good/Above Average. Worth the ticket price. Minor flaws. | | 2.5 – 2.75 | Yellow/Neutral | Mixed Bag. Watch only if you love the hero or have nothing else to do. | | 1.5 – 2.25 | Orange | Poor. Major flaws. Might work on OTT with low expectations. | | 0.5 – 1.0 | Red | Disaster. Save your money. | The Famous "Behindwoods 2.75" Curse Ask any Kollywood fan about "2.75," and they will roll their eyes. Behindwoods has a notorious habit of handing out 2.75 scores to films that are actually decent. Rarely given