Critics of just about anything have probably been so exposed to the medium they're reviewing, having to go through it time and again every day, that I could really see where the "jadedness" is coming from. I read a really good piece at another gaming website that takes this subject on with game critics, how they end up having to play so many games that eventually there ends up being very few they actually like, because it just becomes so much of a chore for them to actually play through them all. I could see the same thing coming from movie critics. With critics of things like movies and food, it's likely that higher education comes into play. They've gone to school for film, cooking school, etc, and that tends to drastically change the outlook that the critics have when it comes to the medium. A movie critic may see something in a performance or camera shot that they appreciate for its artistic value or difficulty that we members of the movie-viewing public will probably not understand. So I could see how they would like more "artsy" movies more than the commercial blockbusters. But in the process, they don't remember the fact that we don't have the same level of knowledge and education about cinema as an art form that they do, and often if they do remember that fact, many tend to put themselves above us "common" movie-going folk and get all snooty about it. To me, that's the point when the newspaper, magazine, website or whatever needs to hire a new reviewer. A good writer needs to take into account the audience they're writing for. I think game reviewers in general do a pretty good job at this, but movie reviewers could do so much better. MovieBob, IMO, is actually one of the best reviewers I know of in this aspect. He remembers that we're gamers (being one himself) and he writes reviews taking into account what movies he thinks gamers enjoy, as well as his own opinion as a reviewer and a person knowledgeable about movies. Movie reviewers in newspapers and magazines tend to forget this, I think, and only write from their own opinion, which has been bent by the sheer number of movies they've seen, and by a much higher education than the average reader. The reviews then tend to be full of information that's not really helpful at all to the average reader when deciding whether they'll like the movie themselves.