Jonathan Foreman
Select another critic »For 546 reviews, this critic has graded:
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42% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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54% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 9.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jonathan Foreman's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 56 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon | |
| Lowest review score: | Zombie! vs. Mardi Gras | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 285 out of 546
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Mixed: 103 out of 546
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Negative: 158 out of 546
546
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Jonathan Foreman
Less an updated version of the Dostoevsky novel than an unusually somber Hollywood teen love story.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
But even that talent (Freeman) isn't enough to distract you from the general predictability of Spider or the absurdity of its elaborate last-minute plot twists.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
At first, it seems stagy and slow and even to verge on the pretentious, but the film steadily accumulates dramatic power as its carefully sketched characters reveal their internal lives. By its end, After Life has developed into one of those haunting movies whose scenes can pop back into your consciousness hours or days after you have seen it. [12 May 1999, p.56]- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
Bowfinger's terrific set-pieces... more than make up for the odd weak moment or thin performance.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
It feels less predictable and derivative than it is, thanks to Gus Van Sant's deft direction and two fine central performances.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
Quirky and good-natured, it makes the most of an unknown but able and refreshingly international cast. And for a low-budget indie, it looks remarkably good and moves along with real snap.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
If you've never seen a "masala" musical, you may find Lagaan hilariously bad. Cartoony acting, dreadful dialogue, obvious dubbing, and meandering but ultrapredictable plots are simply part of the Bollywood package, along with six musical numbers and a bizarre mixture of romance, comedy and melodrama.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
Resembles a period version of "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" - played dead straight.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
You won't see any film this year as beautiful, and plain thrilling as Apocalypse Now Redux. Watching it after sitting through this summer's record number of dumb, dreadful movies is almost a painfully good experience. [3 Aug 2001, p.30]- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
It's frightening enough, to be sure, but too often it feels like a well-executed but rote exercise.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
A rather crude affair that feels like a student film, due to performances that often lack conviction and would-be "street" dialogue that rings false.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
You can tell this is a smart take on Hamlet from the first wordless opening shots.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
Powerful, important and refreshingly straightforward documentary.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
Visually flat and uninteresting and too often feels like a (leisurely paced) filmed play.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
It's a shame that the book "We Were Soldiers Once . . . And Young" fell into the hands of writer-director Randall Wallace ("Braveheart"), a filmmaker who wouldn't recognize subtlety and understatement if they were to attack him in the street.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
Boring and irritating, and also mildly offensive in its ignorant depiction of both Judaism and Catholicism.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
A crass, mechanical attempt at a thriller that should have gone straight to video.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
A strange Gallic imitation of a Woody Allen comedy, replete with a neurotic older hero.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
A crude, manic and embarrassingly unfunny satire that feels off from beginning to end.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
This oddly scrambled new version eventually falls apart so badly you feel embarrassed for the people who made it.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
The most effective moments in Taymor's gorgeous, surprisingly romantic Frida are those that evoke the visual world from which Kahlo's work was formed or the paintings themselves, often using clever animation and other special effects.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
So filled with amusing, idiosyncratic touches and unexpectedly charming characters that you mostly don't mind its excesses.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
The final result, shaped by the brilliantly nimble, pitch-perfect direction of Spike Jonze, and blessed by superb acting, is an extraordinarily clever comedy that falters only in the last 20 minutes.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
One of the more entertaining documentaries to come along in some time.- New York Post
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- Jonathan Foreman
Ghobadi (himself an Iranian Kurd) takes some gorgeous shots against the snow, but his storytelling is uneven and often slow.- New York Post
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