About whose opinion is more reliable, and why, really.
Remember that Hollywood is strongly (but not entirely) driven by the box office take of a movie. When you buy a movie ticket, even if you never see the movie, you are voting, "I want to see more of this," as far as Hollywood is concerned. You are, in effect, casting a vote for more of a thing *you haven't yet seen*.
In addition, it isn't like movie tickets are cheap, and that home video is still crappy. Waiting for it to come out on Netflix is a viable option. Or, really, how much are you missing if you just take a pass?
So, it isn't like, "Do I go to see this?" is a no-brainer question. Asking whether it is worth the time and money isn't irrational. Looking for information to help answer that question isn't foolish or pointless. Taking *hours* pouring over reviews trying to decide is probably foolish - if you spend more time reading reviews than seeing the movie, you've got a problem. So, it becomes a question of who has the more reliable opinion, so you can look someplace quickly and get an idea of whether it is worth it.
I was referring to the two in here having words with each other.