Kim Newman
Select another critic »For 667 reviews, this critic has graded:
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61% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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36% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.7 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Kim Newman's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Killing | |
| Lowest review score: | Movie 43 | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 312 out of 667
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Mixed: 327 out of 667
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Negative: 28 out of 667
667
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Kim Newman
A family comedy lacking the double level of humour that make the modern ones so successful. The jokes are obvious but never very far away. Russell puts in a worthy performance as the irrepressible Ron and Martin Short is typically neurotic as the father.- Empire
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- Empire
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- Kim Newman
The film never sentimentalises the old swine as it explores the nature of his genius. Terrific ballplayer, miserable human being. Unworthy subject, great movie.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
As horribly funny as it is depressing, it gets pretty hard to take after a while, especially for anyone who is a committed cat-lover. A melancholy edge of deliberate poetry mutes the ugly realism but also serves to make bearable what might otherwise be an hour-and-a-half of hell.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
It's incredible that a film could be so closely patterned on Carpenter's still-thrilling original movie and yet be so stupid, unscary and plodding as Halloween 4 is.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
The look, created by Hooper’s cinematographer Daniel Pearl, and expert art direction is persuasively nasty… but somehow that buzzing saw doesn’t sound as scary as it used to.- Empire
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- Empire
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- Kim Newman
Although patched together from loose ends, this works surprisingly well, with interesting and well-integrated visual effects, some nice humour and a few genuinely visionary touches.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
Significantly grittier than previous Bat-beginnings, this finds new things to do with, and say about, a character who's been around since 1938.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
Landis occasionally plays wonderful licks on the cliches, as in an original take on the familiar vampire-burning-up-at-dawn shtick, but like his earlier movies (An American Werewolf In London, The Blues Brothers) this keeps self-destructing on a story level. Of all entries in the recent vampire cycle, this is at once the most hung-up on horror history and the most revisionary in its rewriting of the mythology.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
See-saws between straight superhero movie and parody, with layers of soap-opera fudge in between. A lot of solid scenes - but Hancock lacks the power of super-coherence.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
Millar's warmth for literary influences continues to buoy his filmmaking, whilst a sturdy British cast and faultless period settings do Dahl proud.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
For once, a great remake, smartly executed. Great performances and a killing ending that will stay with you forever can't hurt, either.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
The intricate work of a craftsman, and a beautiful appearance by the beguiling Simone Sigornet.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
Compared to similar genre offerings, this ain't much cop. But standing alone, it's an entertaining and amiable film.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
Poor attempt by Hammer to create their version of Frankenstein, featuring the usually reliable Bates offering a rather irritating performance as the scientist who goes beyond the call of science. Meanwhile before the call of Darth Vader Prowse begins to practice his heavy breathing and ominous walk.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
This subject demands a Godfather Part II, but Stone and collaborators have turned in a Godfather Part III. There is a lot of good material, but LaBeouf nearly sinks it and we could use much more of the old Gekko brimstone.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
A touch too heavy on the Faust scenario, this is nevertheless a typically powerful effort from Stone especially strong on the nightmarish aspects of the war, as when a simple misundertsanding instantly becomes a massacre...Gripping stuff- Empire
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- Kim Newman
It’s quite an entertaining little effort, combining the craziest aspects of classic Hollywood screwball comedy with the kind of fresh insanity found in the great cartoons.- Empire
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- Empire
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- Kim Newman
While not exactly reaching Ring-levels of terror, it's certainly one for connoisseurs of the weird.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
No masterpiece, but a decent rental prospect. Twohy works the Sci-fi genre well yet again.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
Paying attention to religious impulses which are all but incomprehensible in the 20th Century, Bresson conjures up a God-bothered middle ages that is harrowing but not, it must be said, terribly exciting.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
Gorgeous and seductive, if pitched at Almodóvar fans and perhaps a touch long. Those drawn by Cruz’s divadom will wonder why it takes so long to get to her -- though she is wholly dazzling when it does.- Empire
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- Empire
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- Kim Newman
Writer-director Jill Sprecher doesn't have the deftness or sad humour that P. T. Anderson uses in his similarly contrived group portraits, but the cast are, at least, individually fine.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
The story isn't as strong as either Leone or Corbucci's best work, but the iconic imagery and solid central performance from Nero make it easy to see why this became a worldwide success.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
Entertaining in places, if only for the fact that unlike most 50s si-fi films, the aliens are treated with some sympathy.- Empire
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- Kim Newman
Spartacus' merry rabble swarms across country to face a Roman army that, seen from a distance, resembles either a group of ants moving in perfect formation or living chessboard squares marching in order — an unbeatable, fascist machine. It's a breathtaking moment, which forces you to realise that Kubrick (before CGI) had to command extras as rigidly as Crassus runs Rome.- Empire
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- Empire
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