Kyle Smith
Select another critic »For 1,913 reviews, this critic has graded:
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35% higher than the average critic
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1% same as the average critic
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64% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 13.9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Kyle Smith's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 52 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Birth of a Nation | |
| Lowest review score: | Victor Frankenstein | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 789 out of 1913
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Mixed: 407 out of 1913
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Negative: 717 out of 1913
1913
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Kyle Smith
Son of God is guilty of all the sins of the 1950s Bible epics, but without any of the majesty.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 26, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
Besson provided the story and co-wrote the screenplay for a film directed by McG, who does his usual McGhastly job with action and is McGruesome when it comes to comedy.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 20, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
As subtle and careful and slyly disturbing as Child’s Pose is though, it and many others of its genus suffer from an airlessness, pacing like the growth of algae, a dishwater color palate and a dirge-like monotone.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 19, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
Your average episode of “Days of Our Lives” is less soapy (and performed with more restraint).- New York Post
- Posted Feb 19, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
Del Toro overdoes the anguish to the point of looking like he’s playing advanced constipation, and the film, by France’s Arnaud Desplechin, gets stuck in an endless series of therapy scenes built around cheesy re-enactments of Jimmy P’s dreams.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 12, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
Najafi stages action scenes with an intense, queasy beauty and elevates what is in its outlines a routine crime drama to near-operatic proportions.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 12, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
RoboCop is topically up-to-the-moment but stylistically it’s retro. Far from using the story as an excuse to string together cheap thrills and blowout spectacle, its hero has all the heart of the Tin Man.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 11, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
A dismal rom-com for dudes that makes the average beer commercial look nuanced and plot-heavy.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 5, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
The cheesy techno-thriller The Outsider is a blaring B-movie that doesn’t have much going for it, but it does have an engaging action hero in its leading man, a snarling Cockney badass named Craig Fairbrass.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 5, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
As cute and energetic as it is, The Lego Movie is more exhausting than fun, too unsure of itself to stick with any story thread for too long. The action scenes are enthusiastic, colorful but uninvolving, like an 8-year-old emptying a bucket of plastic blocks.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 5, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
This is a useful primer on what went wrong — and right — in 2008.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 30, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
That Awkward Moment is a rom-com for dudes that seeks to outdo the ladies by being even more insipid, formulaic and contrived than anything Katherine Heigl has ever done.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 30, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
A good documentary uses judicious editing to make an important addition to your knowledge of a subject, and Mitt does so in a big way.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 28, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
Ride Along tries to be a comic version of “Training Day,” only there’s nothing in it as funny as Denzel razzing Ethan. There’s nothing much funny in it at all.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 15, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
Soundly structured, smart and fast, with a plausible central scenario, several gripping moments and well-wrought dialogue.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 15, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
A film so self-serious that it demands to be remade as a Seth MacFarlane farce, The Truth About Emanuel mixes the ludicrous and the pretentious in a story about mommy issues gone wild.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- New York Post
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
It’s unspeakably depressing to see Anna Paquin playing the mom (of a teenager!), but the pointlessness and mediocrity of the Paquin-produced Free Ride is even more depressing.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
Long on atmosphere and less sentimental about poverty than “Beasts of the Southern Wild,” the film carries a potent charge of authenticity.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
Beyond Outrage fails to live up to its title as Japanese superstar Takeshi Kitano can’t find much in the way of fresh ideas for the genre.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 4, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
An intriguingly Hitchcockian premise gradually takes on a preposterous air in the art-world noir The Best Offer.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 4, 2014
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- Kyle Smith
Even the audience at whom the movie is aimed — the crowd for whom dinner and a movie means meeting up at 3 p.m. — will be bored by the stale funk coming off every scene.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 24, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The story of a guy who never goes anywhere or does anything. Until he goes everywhere and does everything, but he might as well have stayed home.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 19, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
There hasn’t been this bizarre mixture of hooah and death since John Wayne hung up his combat boots.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 19, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Anchorman 2 is like watching “Anchorman” being re-enacted by semi-professionals trying to cover up their lapses by being extra-emphatic, super-doofy: 2013 Steve Carell does a lousy impression of 2004 Steve Carell.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 17, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The movie is essentially a theater piece in which Nolan (Walker) is mostly alone on screen, making use of what he finds a la John McClane, but without the smart pacing or inventiveness of “Die Hard.”- New York Post
- Posted Dec 12, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
American Hustle is a movie that was built backward, or inside out: It puts actors’ needs before the audience’s. There’s no heart under those polyester lapels, and what all that Aqua Net is pasting together is a few sparse strands of wispy story.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 10, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
About the only reason to stay with this increasingly histrionic film is to satisfy curiosity about exactly how Diego will (as we learn at the outset) die, but long before we learn that Twice Born chokes to death on its own melodrama.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 6, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The Coens, so cutting to so many of their characters, are gentler with Llewyn, inviting us to wander and wonder along with him as he ponders why he must forever play the jerk.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 5, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Despite being named “Gator Bodine,” Franco seems like something Statham would scrape off his boots. Put it this way: Franco needs a baseball bat to be intimidating; Statham just needs to be Statham.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 26, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Provides a different take on its subject than many of us are accustomed to: Nelson Mandela is no Martin Luther King Jr., and he was far more radical than even Malcolm X. If you’re under the impression that his ideas got him imprisoned for 25 years, think again: It was his bombs.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 26, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Ultimately, this throwback, made-for-TV-style film takes the easy way out in a cheesy climax, but its resolute quaintness may appeal to the kind of viewers who regard electricity as disturbingly newfangled.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 22, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
A great big snowy pleasure with an emotionally gripping core, brilliant Broadway-style songs and a crafty plot.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
With Philomena, British producer-writer-star Steve Coogan and director Stephen Frears hit double blackjack, finding a true-life tale that would enable them to simultaneously attack Catholics and Republicans. There’s no other purpose to the movie, so if 90 minutes of organized hate brings you joy, go and buy your ticket now.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
There’s an exhilarating sadness to it all that amounts to cinematic poetry.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 15, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Touching and unexpectedly funny moments (such as McCartney busting out the theme song from “The Monkees”) mingle with highlights from the show for an unusually compelling keepsake from what might well be the last time many of these ’60s rockers perform together.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 15, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
A likable cast and interior-décor porn worthy of Martha Stewart Living are the highlights of The Best Man Holiday, but the mix of raunchy sex comedy and Christian faith doesn’t quite come off.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 14, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
At Berkeley casts a nonjudgmental eye on everyone from cement layers to students discussing Thoreau to administrators complaining about budgeting. If only everything were interesting.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 8, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
An honorable, sober but completely unnecessary take on the Dickens novel, Great Expectations serves as a fine introduction to the story but won’t excite those familiar with previous versions.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 7, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Nov 6, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
To keep this one-man show visually engaging, director Sophie Fiennes places the professor in sets and costumes from the movies, talking about “Full Metal Jacket” from atop a barracks toilet and “Brief Encounter” from a 1940s British train.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 1, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
It’s Margaux, the tragic supermodel and failed actress who took her own life at 42, who emerges as the film’s fount of heartbreak in several stunning scenes.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 1, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
For all its glutinous cuteness, damn if About Time doesn’t sneak up and sock you in the tear ducts. I tried not to fall for it. I failed.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 31, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Mostly a routine love story elevated by one of the year’s most magnetic performances.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 25, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Oct 24, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The film is still a gripping experience, though, with its circling sharks, its sun-dappled beauty and its agonies of shattered hope. At one point I was convinced that Sandra Bullock would splash down next to our man in her space capsule and Hanks’ Maersk ship from “Captain Phillips” would steam by to pick up both of them.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 20, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Any prison-break yarn that includes Arnold Schwarzenegger delivering the line “You hit like a vegetarian” is OK by me.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Hire “Dreamgirls” director Bill Condon to tell the story of Julian Assange and WikiLeaks? Sure, and next let’s hear from Lady Gaga on the Higgs boson particle.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Cody’s satiric knocks on Christians couldn’t be more blundering and obvious. Yet her dialogue is often funny, and the unusual three-way friendship is refreshing. Even former star Brand has learned to dial back his manic mugging, though maybe not quite enough.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Drifts awkwardly between popcorn entertainment and angsty mood piece.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 11, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
As Franco dilutes the drama with first-year-film-student gimmicks, like split screens and slow motion, it just seems like a dull collection of pointless monologues from actors who can’t even be bothered to match up their accents. Franco is a dilettante, and it shows.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 11, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
If Broadway shows had DVD featurettes, the unexceptional documentary Broadway Idiot would be perfect for one.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 11, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Entertainingly gruesome in parts, and not without a certain anarchic wit, it’s the kind of movie you pause to watch when it’s on TV, but after half an hour, you’ll click over to something else.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 10, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Remember the old Ben Affleck, the one who made 28 consecutive bad movies before he turned out to be a pretty good director? He’s back! Behold, the second coming of . . . Badfleck.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 4, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
All of this is secondary, even tertiary material, even if much of it is interesting and even wrenching to behold.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 3, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
A contrived comedy that could have made an especially weak episode of “Everybody Loves Raymond.”- New York Post
- Posted Oct 3, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
This comedy is cringe-inducingly lame and the dramatic turns are visible as far in advance as utility poles on the prairie.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Can’t somebody come up with a monster that does something more interesting than run at you screaming, “Yeeaaaarrrrgh”?- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Rush, though it will win no trophies, is fine filmmaking, a smart, visually engorged, frequently thrilling tale of boyish competition — inspired by a true story. At heart it’s “Amadeus” on wheels, only this time Salieri is the Austrian.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Blue Caprice takes a minimalist, documentary-style approach that proves harrowingly effective.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Remember when Robert De Niro was an interesting actor? These days his talent, like his character in The Family, is in the witness protection program, never to be seen again.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The movie jogs along nicely without ever getting a case of the stupids; far from being a bloated “John Carter,” it’s just a pared-down yarn of survival: “Die Hard” on a planet.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
A disarming but low-impact documentary that amounts to an odd dual biopic, Shepard & Dark can feel a bit like intruding on a conversation between two old friends.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
This movie is basically “Spinal Tap” minus the jokes. Two of the band members have the word “Metallica” emblazoned on their clothing. Metallica — it’s the band that has to remind fans whom they’re watching!- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Whelk, I hope the makers of Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs earned a nice celery, but I’m afraid they made a hash of things. A hash seasoned with oy sauce.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Aug 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Getaway is so bad that what’s most surprising about it is that Nicolas Cage didn’t manage to star in it. But one man can only do so many low-rent projects a year.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 29, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Bloody horror flicks need not be anemic when it comes to intelligence. The victims of You’re Next, as well as their slaughterers, are reasonably smart and resourceful. Their clash may not be as nasty as the battles of academia, but there’s a lot more common sense involved.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The movie independently bungles everything it tries, like a Central Park busker who simultaneously sucks at juggling, harmonica playing and skateboarding.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones hopes to be the start of a new franchise for tweens and Twihards, but the twuth is this twash is anything but a twiumph.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 20, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
In mashing together story elements from Terrence Malick’s “Badlands” with the look of Malick’s “Days of Heaven,” Lowery put 90 percent of his energy into the atmosphere and 10 percent into the script.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 15, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Aug 15, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
I do get a chuckle out of movies with wildly inappropriate behavior, rude language and ultramayhem, especially when they involve children, but Kick-Ass 2 sometimes felt like being trapped in a room with the funniest guy in seventh grade.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 15, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
An uneasy mix of Richard Linklater and Abbott and Costello, Prince Avalanche is an oddment, but one that brings some small, peculiar pleasures.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 9, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
For a 99 percenter movie, then, Elysium is kind of a head-scratcher. It throws away its best opportunity for drama. It’s as if Han and Leia parked on the Death Star and started asking, “How much is a two-bedroom around here?”- New York Post
- Posted Aug 6, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The movie, directed by the formerly promising Rawson Marshall Thurber (the hilarious “Dodgeball” and the awful “The Mysteries of Pittsburgh”), thinks it’s subverting the conventions of the sitcom with a revolutionary new idea, which is: Do everything exactly the way a sitcom would, plus lots of swearing and dirty jokes.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 6, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The teen movie The Spectacular Now begins like “Say Anything” but soon turns into “Drink Anything.”- New York Post
- Posted Aug 2, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
You may protest that this is just a splattery feature-length sketch, and you’d be absolutely right. Why not have a laugh at this absurdly trite concept? I’ll take the cheesy breeziness of “CVZ” over the frowny somberness of “World War Z” any day.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 2, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Not every movie can come from the heart: This one is from the crotch. But what’s left for the sequel? Maybe it’ll feature Mark and Denzel sporting matching leather codpieces or giving each other bikini waxes. We can only hope.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 1, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
In the ’80s, I hated Ronald Reagan, Bob Dylan and the Smurfs. It’s comforting to know I got one thing right.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 31, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The shallow, derivative and contrived British heist thriller Wasteland lives down to its unfortunate name.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 26, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
I liked that The Wolverine (which saves a nifty twist for a surprise scene in the middle of the end credits) turns down the volume on the usual din of colliding mutant superpowers.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 25, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Even for a mumblecore film, Computer Chess is weak stuff, a punitively dull chunk of quirk that is about, and feels like, being stuck in a motel with a gaggle of programming nerds for a weekend.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
For a movie that so strenuously rips off “Ghostbusters” and “Men in Black,” R.I.P.D. manages to come up with fresh new ways of being absolutely terrible.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
How bad could the boneyard be compared to sitting through this execrable piece of non-entertainment? Better dead than RED 2.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The film, then, places a heavy hand on the scales of justice as it winds up with a fuzzy plea — an implied demand for a second, federal civil rights trial for the cop, who got a light sentence. But the shooting wasn’t a racist one.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Anything can happen when Michael Cera wanders around Chile without a script on a mission to get high on mescaline. Or, in the case of Crystal Fairy, nothing could happen, too.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Jul 4, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Neil Jordan’s Byzantium dares to rework “Twilight” with twice the teen moping and Robert Pattinson replaced by a guy with the sexual magnetism of a sickly Ron Weasley.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 28, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Its priceless clips from the disco era aside, The Secret Disco Revolution laughably fails to turn Barry White and Donna Summer into the Che Guevara and Emma Goldman of the dance floor.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 28, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The movie, told from the killer’s point of view, is genuinely unsettling and propelled by a terrific, buzzing synth soundtrack straight out of the early ’80s. But the only suspense is in which woman will be the next victim.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 20, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Somm does a fairly impressive job of making wine tasting somewhat cinematic despite its being essentially unfilmable, at least until taste-o-vision comes along.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 20, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
So once you figure out the first rule of Zombie Fight Club — nothing too bad can happen to Brad Pitt — the movie is, despite intermittent thrills, rote.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 18, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
In Vehicle 19, Paul Walker is back behind the wheel again, but this time it’s a rented minivan and the plot is brainless even for a Paul Walker movie. Get ready for “The Slow and the Spurious.”- New York Post
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
A clever, elliptical, slightly bizarre and altogether transfixing psychological thriller.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
In other words, this punkish, sleek film about beautiful kids wallowing in purloined Prada could have been written by a grumpy 65-year-old white guy in gabardine, provided he had a sense of irony. The Bling Ring is the bridge between Coppola and Bill O’Reilly.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
There is stuff in This Is the End that had me laughing so hard, I sensed new body parts joining in to help out — my pancreas was heaving, my bile ducts ripped.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 10, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
This material cries out for big-budget treatment by a real master like Paul Thomas Anderson or Martin Scorsese.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Though darker elements loom in the shadows, nothing in this painfully sincere film is remotely affecting; just think of it as “My So-Called Strife.”- New York Post
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
A dull drama about domestic squabbling that hopes to be mistaken for a thriller.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
It seems more likely that a dumb movie will lead only to a time-wasting surge in applications from dummies. Maybe The Internship was secretly funded by Bing.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Less a movie than a checklist of indiecinema clichés. Youth on a journey of self-discovery? Got it. Dead mom? Uh-huh. Wounded and entitled when it’s trying to be soulful, plotless, laden with indie rock and entirely overhyped at Sundance? Checkarooney.- New York Post
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Someday, when gay Americans enjoy full equality, we can all hope their sexuality will finally stop being used as fodder for dopey, hopelessly contrived dramas like I Do.- New York Post
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Let’s say you wanted to have another go at “Red Dawn” but you think more like Redford. Voilà: You’d have The East, a cockamamie valentine to eco-terrorism.- New York Post
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Despite Gibney’s best efforts to put a halo on Manning, the enormity of what the soldier did towers over what has been done to him.- New York Post
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
I had the sensation of sitting through a fourth-grade school play that contained no children of my own: the very definition of a nightmare.- New York Post
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The good news is that The Hangover Part III isn't a rerun like the second episode. The bad news is everything else. For all the promise of mayhem and WTF moments, the final episode hits you with all the force of a warm can of O'Doul's.- New York Post
- Posted May 22, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
At least there is a happy ending — DeChristopher, for wasting the government’s resources, properly served 21 months in federal prison. Now, he has moved on to Harvard Divinity School, where his sanctimony will serve him well.- New York Post
- Posted May 16, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Baumbach seems mainly interested in capturing the whimsical rhythms of unformed post-college life, with money too scarce and roommates too ample — but he already did that, did it better and with more rueful feeling, in the much funnier “Kicking and Screaming,” the debut he made at 25 and one of the best films of the 1990s.- New York Post
- Posted May 16, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The terrorism thriller Java Heat sure is violent. I don’t even want to tell you how viciously Mickey Rourke mangles the French accent he’s trying to do.- New York Post
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
A weird mash-up of disaster, horror and dystopia genre pictures, Aftershock fails to make the Earth move.- New York Post
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
What begins as an alert and witty barbed satire degenerates into a senseless bloodbath in the black comedy Sightseers.- New York Post
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Chism’s characters are pleasingly odd, and though she can’t string much of a narrative together — there is a stop-and-start quality to the picture that grows tiresome — a few of the set pieces are funny.- New York Post
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Has the aroma of an autobiographical confession by someone for whom life hasn’t been overly difficult.- New York Post
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
This is a fine idea for a PSA TV commercial, but (a) they already did it back in the ’70s and (b) it goes on well past the 30-second mark.- New York Post
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The villains are all wrong, the motivations are muddy, even the gadgetry is off. And the swaggering genius at the center of it all has become a preening fool.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 30, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
In the most thrilling sequence of this consistently rousing old-school adventure, Heyerdahl grabs a passing shark with his bare hands, thrusts a hook into it, drags it aboard and guts it with a knife. Now that’s what I call entertainment. I haven’t seen such crazed brutality since Lou Lumenick’s review of “Movie 43.”- New York Post
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
A dizzying lowlife saga that’s fast, smart, wicked, sort of ambitious and blazingly ironic. It’s as unpredictable as a Lindsay Lohan drive to the grocery store, as overstuffed as the pictures on Anthony Weiner’s Twitter feed and as hilarious as me on the bench press.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
In the House promises to be a social satire with a flash of Hitchcockian menace, but gradually it turns into a routine thumb-sucker on reality versus fiction.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 18, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Without an exceptionally skilled director of actors (such as Cameron Crowe), Cruise can’t dial up much emotion, so the two love interests for his character are two more than he can convincingly handle. He may be at home in the cockpit of a killing machine, but when it comes to displaying his humanity, he’s no Wall-E.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 18, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
This is a horror movie that’s really a supposed comedy; she’s (Lohan) a supposed comedy actress who’s actually scary.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 12, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Soulful though the film is, melodrama gradually sneaks in, and then it takes over.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 11, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Typically, To the Wonder seems mostly locked in the thoughts of its characters, whispered so only we can hear, with no more actual back-and-forth dialogue than would cover the back of your ticket stub.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 11, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Writer-director Antonio Campos, making excellent use of the queasy rhythms of a percussive musical score, keeps piling up the dread as we wonder just how dangerous Simon can be to the women who keep taking pity on him.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 5, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
A preposterous supernatural thriller that inexplicably managed to sign up Julianne Moore to star.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 4, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
This exhilarating brain-twister is a nonstop visual, aural and intellectual delight, steeped in movie conventions and yet fizzing with freshness. It’s what happens when film noir goes out to a rave.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 4, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
I’m probably more intrigued than 99.3 percent of the American public by the idea of deconstructing the hidden symbols in Stanley Kubrick’s “The Shining,” but the theories proposed in the doc Room 237 aren’t eye-opening. They’re laughable.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Like the paintings of the master, Renoir is beautiful to look at, but it would be a mistake to call the film (or its subject) shallow.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Don't let the quiet, indie stylings of The Place Beyond the Pines fool you. This is a big movie with a lot on its mind. Slowly, it unfolds into a kind of epic.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Argentina’s noir Everybody Has a Plan is as sludgy as the river delta in which it takes place.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 22, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
You do have to give Starbuck credit for engineering perhaps the largest group hug ever put on film.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 22, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
This unapologetic B-movie at least keeps the action rolling, and the time goes by quickly. To put it another way, I’d rather see Gerard Butler stab a terrorist in the neck than flirt with Katherine Heigl.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
I’d like to take back all those times I said Nicolas Cage was one of the most annoying actors on film. It turns out he’s equally terrible when he’s only on the soundtrack. And yet Cage is the least of the problems with The Croods.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
A great writer deserves a more penetrating and inquisitive documentary: Reverence is not the path to understanding.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 14, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Argentine writer-director Juan Solanas’ fantasy romance Upside Down is such a gorgeous wreck that I could almost sense Terry Gilliam somewhere muttering, “Wait a minute, I should have been the one to screw up this idea.”- New York Post
- Posted Mar 14, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
There was a time when the climate-change alarmist movement was like a guy with a megaphone at your ear, but now it’s more like a squirrel at your shoelaces.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Fake documentaries annoy me — why not put in the effort and deliver the real thing? — and this one is not only aimless and stiff, it also rings false.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
While a mob thriller can be as nasty as it likes, what it can’t be is silly.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Feb 28, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
I don’t know how many sex scenes featuring Winstone and Atwell you can handle, but the movie breaches my limit, which is a firm zero.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 28, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
This digitally tricked-out fairy tale makes for a reasonably engaging kids’ fantasy, but at best we’re talking about a junior varsity “Lord of the Rings.” It’s March. What did you expect?- New York Post
- Posted Feb 28, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Feb 21, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The danger of trying to do a supernatural comedy-romance is that you’ll wind up being as funny as “Twilight,” with all the raw sexual energy of “Bewitched.” Beautiful Creatures isn’t quite that bad, though it did make me long for the cleverer “Dark Shadows.”- New York Post
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
No, which has been nominated for this year’s Best Foreign Language Film Oscar, is largely a gimmick picture: At all times, it looks like hastily assembled news footage shot on grainy videotape in 1988. That means light flaring up to spoil the image, bumpy camerawork, a nearly square picture and all-around grubbiness.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The tone of The Playroom is one of soppy moroseness. This imitation “Ice Storm” is as refreshing as a step into a puddle of slush.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Funny and promising as the first act is, the entire second act is pretty awful, as the script chucks in one tiresome, unlikely gag after another.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
A supernatural horror-comedy that's frighteningly lacking in wit, John Dies at the End thinks it's "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" for dudes. But in its randomness, its vulgarity and its level of humor, it's more like the collected writings on the walls of a roadside men's room.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The leads are likeable enough, but the script reanimates "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" tactics - a monster story supposedly made hilarious by being told by a savvy high schooler. These lines aren't even jokes, though, they're just collisions of the brutal and the banal.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
First-time writer-director Andy Muschietti, an Argentine discovered by Guillermo del Toro, relies too much, especially in the early going, on horror clichés (sudden loud noises and jagged blasts of music), but he does make the tension hum.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 17, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Jan 11, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Among gay Jewish French postman movies, Let My People Go! may be a Hall of Fame entry, but alas, by any other standard this would-be sex comedy is a dismal failure.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 11, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
The line between honey and syrup is a fine one, I'll grant you, but "Best Exotic Marigold" was on the wrong side of it. Quartet carries a noble glow, as serene and beautiful as sunset.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 10, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
56 Up is as good a point as any to get hooked on the magnificent half-century series of documentaries, beginning in 1964 with "7 Up."- New York Post
- Posted Jan 4, 2013
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- Kyle Smith
Much has been made of the fact that Promised Land was partly funded by the enemies of our domestic gas industry - the foreign oil nabobs in the United Arab Emirates. But the film gets so cheesy that I suspect it was also secretly funded by Velveeta.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 28, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
I don't think he (Apatow) did enough research on his topic. Because no one could be as whiny, spoiled, tasteless, combative and reliant on annoying stand-up comedy riffs as the entire cast of this film, the most disappointing one of the year.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
What's best about the film are its quick jumps from one depravity to the next as jazz rambles on the soundtrack: Youth is a candle to be burned at both ends, with (as it was once said about Bob Dylan) a blowtorch in the middle.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Cruise's Jack Reacher is a loner who doesn't smile, charm, love the ladies, aim his index fingers to the heavens or sing "You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling" in bars. Here he just snarls and kills people. Yes, please, and let's have more of the same.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Django Unchained might have been a revelation in 2005. But after Quentin Tarantino and others have spent years spoofing '60s and '70s genre movies, this mock spaghetti Western tastes like it came out of the microwave.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
It's a one-joke movie, if "Jewish mothers are annoying" is a joke. But just as a film about boredom should not actually be boring, no movie should credibly simulate the experience of being stuck in a car with Barbra Streisand for eight days.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 19, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
If the poor really interested such filmmakers, these movies would have something to offer other than lugubriousness masquerading as seriousness, and clichés presented as hard truths.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 14, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
This is grim, bleak material that at times is monotonous, but its woe feels authentic.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Painful, misshapen and a little gross. It's an enlarged prostate of a movie.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
One of those movies that comes "straight from the heart" - the heart of the hack screenwriter's manual that pushes formulaic structure to cover up a lack of compelling characters, genuine emotion or actual humor.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 7, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Frears has a lot of fun with the bad tempers and high spirits of this crew of adrenaline junkies, and though the story falls a little flat, the script is sprinkled with dry wit.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 7, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The movie is trying to do far too much and doesn't do anything well. "Ambitious" isn't the word here; "random" is more like it.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 7, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Carlyle gives a quietly engaging performance as a Golden State farmworker with a secret in the likable indie California Solo.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
An intensity of purpose and a patient, suspenseful directing style make the B-movie Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning superior to most of the big-budget action films I've seen lately.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
I might forgive the slow start if it weren't for the slow middle and slow end.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
This infomercial for Helnwein's work as designer for an Israeli opera called "The Child Dreams" doesn't tell us a lot about how opera comes together, but it is accidentally revealing about its subject.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 21, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The visual effects are amazing, but they don't make up for acting that is restrained to an uninsightful fault.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 21, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
I can't remember ever seeing such a spectacular implosion of a squad of all-stars as Rise of the Guardians. Well, not since Yankee Stadium in October.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 21, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The dull, predictable direction is the perfect match for a watery, nondescript cast.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 21, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
When Hopkins' Hitch directs the audience by waving his hands like a symphony conductor - it's a nice callback to a Hannibal Lecter highlight - it's one of the best scenes of the year: a delightfully personal way to show how the story of "Psycho" concluded.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 21, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Picture "Raging Bull" with a sleazy prep from the Brooklyn hipsteropolis of Williamsburg, and you'll get the idea of The Comedy, a character study that tries to make the revolting compelling.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 16, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
A hilarious Parker Posey provides her customary blast of brittle energy in Price Check, an engaging corporate comedy.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 16, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Nov 8, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Nov 8, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Like a lesser Python entry ("The Meaning of Life"?), it's alternately brilliant and frustrating.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 8, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
In the utterly routine effort Skyfall, we're actually expected to cheer each chord we've heard so many times (here's a martini shaker! Look, it's a Walther PPK! And there's an Aston Martin!) We've been turned into wretched Pavlovian dogs, salivating at the bell instead of the snack. The highlight, by far, is a classic animated credit sequence: Adele, you are the new Shirley Bassey.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 7, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
At 96 minutes it is exactly 93 1/2 minutes too long. If they're going to put this artifact in theaters, they'd better charge 1973 grindhouse prices: a dollar a ticket.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Cancels itself out by being too campy to take seriously and too tragic to laugh at.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Molly Ringwald-like, Wren must choose between two guys: the nerdy Roosevelt (Thomas Mann) and the Porsche-driving Aaron (Thomas McDonell), but both are so dull it's hard to care. So feeble is the movie that even the wacky, redheaded best friend (Jane Levy) isn't funny.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 26, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Prieto does what he can to keep things roaring along, but the overall effect is not a lot more stimulating than your average diet cola.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 25, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Oct 25, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
None of Dunham's humor comes across, except when someone says, "And when you speak, your words are snakes I swat at with swords," which is hilarious, but not intentionally.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 19, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
No one loves a broad comedy like the French, but Gallic touches of restraint tend to keep such light entertainment pleasing rather than blundering.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 19, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Even if you overlooked the production values from a 1986 porno and special effects like something your nephew cooked up on his Mac, the movie's "Yay, money!" zingers are just a big bag of sad.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The parallels between the kids' war and the real one are made far too obvious by Christophe Barratier, who made the equally treacly "The Chorus" and infests the movie with nonstop musical goo.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
In the end (which continues into the credits), I was left thinking McDonagh can do better than this, and yet I was slightly more agog with admiration than peevish with frustration. Most of all, I wanted to see the film again.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
There needs to be a 12-step program for movie people to stop sharing their "deeply personal" yet insight-free stories of addiction.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
It's another in the bicoastal indie industry's endless series of self-congratulatory comedies about the alleged dopiness of middle American hicks who do things like read Parade magazine and decorate with flags.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 5, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Directed by journeyman actor Matthew Lillard, this tame and by-the-numbers effort never succeeds in making the outcast situation cinematic or interesting.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 5, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The Paperboy can't decide whether to be an unfunny sex comedy, a half-hearted detective story or a woeful race drama - so it decides to be all three, then becomes yet another movie (a swampy "Heart of Darkness") in the final act.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 5, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
It's a time capsule from a strange moment - like "Hair" without the groovy music.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
I haven't seen a timelier or more important film this year, and the film's passion for school choice could hardly be more warranted. Along with documentaries such as "The Lottery" and "Waiting for 'Superman,' " the film comes with a background sound of the ice of inertia cracking.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Bouncy vocal rearrangements of pop songs, sparkling choreography and a hilarious script make for a movie that's made to be obsessed over, seen 50 times, quoted as devoutly as such sacred texts as "Heathers" and "Bring It On."- New York Post
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Initially, this low-budget film writes a lot of checks on the First National Bank of Whimsy, but I was astonished when none of them bounced.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 21, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
This is just a slow-moving skin flick broken up by lots of boring discussions about Cherry's future.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 21, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Baseball movies tend to be lyrical, deeply felt, aggressively metaphorical and (consequently) terrible, but Trouble With the Curve has something most others lack: Eastwood's superb, cruel sense of humor, which reaches all the way back to "Every Which Way But Loose."- New York Post
- Posted Sep 20, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
All I wanted to do was escape from this aggressively ugly world and its equally unattractive characters. It's not that the movie is in bad taste or cheesy (though it is) but that all of its hyperviolence adds up to nothing: This thing is dedd.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 20, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Liberal Arts comes to us produced by Josh Radnor. Written by Josh Radnor. Starring Josh Radnor. Josh Radnor is much like Woody Allen, except for the talent.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
There may be a lot left to say about Hurricane Katrina, but if so, I'm Carolyn Parker doesn't say it.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Every episode of "Law & Order" I've ever seen has a more complicated and plausible plot, punchier dialogue and more New York authenticity, all in less than half the time consumed by this poky would-be finance thriller.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Sundance Mopey Alienation Flick No. 4,228 is For Ellen, an empty angst-athon that proves 90 minutes of close-ups of Paul Dano looking wounded can be even less interesting than it sounds.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 7, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
It turns out that constraint is really what the show is all about, or to put it another way, I'm disappointed that they turned my horny-teen comedy into a gross-out comedy.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 7, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Spits out enough scares and twists to maintain our interest, but the film's psycho-sociological layer is almost as cheesy and unconvincing as its low-rent action scenes.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 30, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Picture Graham Greene crossed with James Bond, with a splash of Sacha Baron Cohen, and you'll start to imagine the nervy talents of Mads Brügger, the fearless Danish filmmaker who has for a second time come up with a stunning, funny, and vital piece of guerilla cinema.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 30, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Biehn has appeared in dozens of B-movies and evidently had no greater ambition than to come up with a grindhouse movie full of sex, gore and cheap thrills, but there is far too little of any of these to maintain interest in a straight-on story that reserves its only surprise for the final 30 seconds.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
France's friendship dramedy Little White Lies is such a blatant rip-off of a far better American movie that it could have been called "Le Big Chill."- New York Post
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Stakes aren't the only problem with this sloppy thriller, which combines careening images with turgid storytelling.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
A shoddy, slapdash look at issues raised by the Great Depression that neither gives an adequate overview nor manages to argue a coherent thesis.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 17, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Acquires a little vigor and some fun from Tracy Morgan as a friendly drug dealer who lives with his mom.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 17, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Dire musical interludes are sprinkled throughout the sprawling mess Beloved, an uninvolving would-be romantic epic that spans 45 years in the life of a mother and her daughter, starting in the early 1960s.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 17, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The climax is as dull as reading the dictionary of a language you do not speak.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 17, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
If the movie's story is anything but daring, it does takes guts to make a movie so shamelessly emotional as this one. Not that guts are the same as taste.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 15, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
A Walmart "Wall Street," the hedge-fund drama Supercapitalist is junk merchandise stamped "made in China."- New York Post
- Posted Aug 10, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Formerly a maker of bad, but at least angry, movies, Spike Lee now seems to be trying to be the world's oldest student filmmaker. Take out the rookie mistakes from Red Hook Summer, and there'd be nothing left.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 10, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Aug 10, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Corny action scenes and borderline-hilarious direction by Isaac Florentine mark the film as an obvious straight-to-video item that somehow took a wrong turn into a movie theater.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 3, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
A sort of "Babel" of bonking, 360 gives us much in the way of international anguish, frustrated coupling and longing stares, but there's very little plausibility or genuine emotion in its egregiously contrived story of ardor gone amiss.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 3, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
As for a villain, you could do worse than Bryan Cranston as the evil political overlord who is trying to stamp out the resistance -- When he goes mano a mano with Farrell, it's not spine-tingling. It's embarrassing, like watching a dude beat up his dad.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 3, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
A sleazy and pointless film about sleazy and pointless people, Killer Joe reminds us that what Quentin Tarantino does isn't easy.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 27, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The danger of dreaming up a predictable adventure for a group of nobodies you hold in contempt is that the audience will see your indifference and raise you.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 27, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Like Provence itself, Auteuil is in no hurry to get anywhere, reveling instead in the southern region's brilliant light and whispering crickets. His tangy accent and evident fondness for his character make the picture enjoyable enough as it plods along, and the final act wraps things up on a fulfilling note.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 20, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
At first glance, Grassroots doesn't seem like much of an idea for a movie. Nor at second, third or fourth glance. Your fifth glance will be at your watch, and at sixth glance your eyelids will be getting very, very heavy.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Gritty visuals and a strong central performance elevate the routine crime story at the heart of Sweden's Easy Money, a sort of mash-up of "Goodfellas" and "The Great Gatsby."- New York Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Jacquot's lavish décor and costumes are like the perfume the women use instead of bathing: They may cover up the willful carelessness at the center of the project, but it's still there.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
At best, the film serves up mild chuckles, with occasional cute jokes.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
A decent idea for an episode of "Everybody Loves Raymond," The Do-Deca-Pentathlon falls short as a movie.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 6, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Familiar elements such as a dark family secret, a ghost and a Ouija board start to seem trite after a while, and the third act is a little ridiculous, but debut writer-director Nicholas McCarthy does a lot with a little and seems fully prepared to handle a big-studio horror project.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 6, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Despite its excesses, Savage" is never unintentionally funny, just gritty and mean. The run time is more than two hours, yet it's also tight: no drag, no waste, no message.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 6, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The nicest thing I can think of to say about the doc Neil Young Journeys is that at least it isn't in 3-D.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The surprise of Ted is that it goes for honest Spielbergian wonder, too, and even earns some tears.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Sheen's throwback portrayal is appealing enough, but flat characters, dull revelations and uninvolving complications make this deliberately small film feel nearly microscopic.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
In To Rome With Love, Allen approaches the leitmotif in a strange, oblique and interesting way. I fear, though, that the Italian entry in his "Let's Go: Grab Some Euro-Film Subsidies" period will be remembered as being forgettable.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
I didn't know whether to be more offended as a moviegoer or as an American, but I do know I'd rather gargle nitroglycerine than watch this again, though given that the film looks like it were buried under a log cabin for a century, I barely saw it the first time.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
That's My Boy is pretty raunchy, and by "pretty," I mean "amazingly," as in Howard Stern- or Seth MacFarlane-style gags.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 15, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The movie is so inept - with its flat characters, histrionic acting, dull dialogue ("Killing him is not going to change anything"), a dreadfully overdone musical score and la-la-la flashbacks starring the kid - that its clichés grow slightly funny. But not funny enough to make the endless torture scenes bearable.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 15, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The main flaw is that, as an actor, Duplass isn't able to make the audience love him. Picture "Bottle Rocket"-era Owen Wilson in the role, and you've got something special.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Gorgeous set pieces thrill the senses, but there is philosophical inquiry as well. "Alien" was, after all, just "Jaws" in space, but Prometheus ponders where evil comes from and how it conquers its makers.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Jun 1, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The movie seems to think it's building up massive suspense by not telling us our hero's back story, but given that the wife and kid aren't around and he keeps telling people who ask that he's not divorced, it's obvious they're dead. The only mystery, then, is what exactly happened to them. The answer is: nothing interesting.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 1, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
If you can overlook Andie MacDowell's Mitteleuropa accent as a Jewish Holocaust survivor (I know: big if), the cinematic roman a clef Mighty Fine has some quiet charms.- New York Post
- Posted May 25, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
A would-be piece of pulp fiction about a parolee trying to go straight, The Samaritan proves that even Samuel L. Jackson can be boring.- New York Post
- Posted May 18, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
It makes "Top Gun" look like the work of Orson Welles. At least the Tom Cruise movie remembered to cast actual actors.- New York Post
- Posted May 18, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Nesting is a sitcom, but a really slow and dull one that barely grinds out 22 minutes' worth of plot to fill a 90-minute hole.- New York Post
- Posted May 11, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Wilkinson's reflective and regretful searcher, burdened by secrets, is also touching, as are Dench and Nighy's creations, so it's easy to cheer them on as they inch toward revelations and rebirth.- New York Post
- Posted May 4, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The Avengers is neither overwhelming nor underwhelming. What it expertly is, is whelming.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Apr 20, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Apr 13, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Apr 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Besson co-wrote and produced this cheesy mash-up of elements from James Bond and "Battlestar Galactica."- New York Post
- Posted Apr 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
I've seen a lot of rip-offs of "The Truman Show" and a lot of rip-offs of "Scream." I guess I have to give credit to The Cabin in the Woods for ripping off both at once.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 13, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Maybe DVDs of "Buried" and ATM will be sold in the same package someday. You could call it a trapped-in-a-box set.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 6, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Apr 6, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
So gripping and focused that it easily bests Hollywood movies with 50 times its budget.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 6, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Dafoe proves to have the right blend of ruggedness and sensitivity for this conflicted hero. The actor's habit of maintaining a lavishly styled coiffure in all situations, even when his character is meant to be sleeping in the rain for days on end, is becoming distracting, though.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 6, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
The dialogue, while filthy, is wickedly funny, and sounds perfect coming out of the mouths of these beaten-down characters in their low-rent surroundings.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Wrath of the Titans suggests a franchise that isn't trying very hard, and I don't really expect a sequel. But if it does happen, I fear it'll be even less of an event: "Tiff of the Titans."- New York Post
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
There is one big winner in this mess, though. Congratulations, 1961's "Snow White and the Three Stooges": You're now the second-worst movie on the subject.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Mar 23, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
Amusing and informative (and hyperbolic) as it is, All In: The Poker Movie is a documentary whose intended audience is unclear.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 23, 2012
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- Kyle Smith
May be well-intentioned, but it's as obvious and inert as a spoonful of mashed potatoes.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 23, 2012
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