Kyle Smith
Select another critic »For 1,913 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
35% higher than the average critic
-
1% same as the average critic
-
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:
-
Positive: 789 out of 1913
-
Mixed: 407 out of 1913
-
Negative: 717 out of 1913
1913
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- Kyle Smith
Any movie that finds a plausible reason to give Lindsay Lohan a nun's habit and a machine gun is worth your attention.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
With its starkly contrasted visuals (fierce blacks, Clorox whites, a dash of unholy crimson), The Spirit may resemble a comic book more than any live-action film yet made, but it makes "Max Payne" look like a gleaming jewel of storytelling by comparison.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Good grindhouse fun until a last act that's like a meeting of a psychoanalysts' convention.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The bad movie in my head was far better than the one on-screen, which offers no twists at all. A twist? There isn't even a curl or a bend.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
As for the script, a wittier director would have spotted the absurd elements and delivered a horror-comedy instead of a straight-faced bore.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Wraps a sari around the kind of suffering-housewife picture that became a cliché 30 years ago.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Although the payoff is creepy, it takes a little too long to arrive -- and when it does, it's about as worn-out as the movie's title.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
As for Grant, who hasn't been this sharp since "Love Actually" six years ago, he is once again the prime minister of cute comedy.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Hot Rod started to go wrong at about the time someone in casting said, "You know what? I'll bet America's just about ready for the comedy stylings of Sissy Spacek."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Just when things should be getting exciting and complex, they become repetitive and predictable. Subtext becomes hint becomes statement becomes declaration. For once, Pinter is a little too easy to understand.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Combines unpleasantness and stupidity to a degree that would be difficult to match unless you were stuck in bed with a case of the shingles while being forced to watch “The Ghost Whisperer."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
It has cult item stamped all over it, and fans of (severely) experimental cinema might see it as a revelation. Most others will find that watching this movie is like having your senses beaten with a rake.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A real actioner, generous with the bullets and blood and chase scenes, that simultaneously mocks shoot-'em-ups.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A wink of self-awareness might have made this a guilty pleasure; instead it's a howler along the lines of this fall's "Law Abiding Citizen."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie is well-acted, but it's as talky as if it were written for the stage, with fatally slow pacing. Strictly for hard-core Sayles fans and maybe for lovers of American roots music.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The Wrestler offers something to pretty much everyone in the audience. Much like "The Sopranos," it creates a world that might make you feel utterly at home or exhilarated by strange horrors. Maybe both.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Lymelife, set amid marital decay and teen frustration, isn't quite the "American Beauty" of the 516 area code, but it'll do.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A roaring old-school action adventure for kids, with as many mythical beasts as a year at Hogwarts and a healthy dose of smiting without the crazed bloodlust of “300.”- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Overrun with malicious goblins, a vengeance-minded pig, a fast-moving troll and a giant horned ogre, but the true source of terror is scarier than all of these combined: New York real estate prices.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Five minutes before The Golden Compass started, I was wondering when it was going to start. Forty minutes into it, I was wondering exactly the same thing.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Remember how "Double Indemnity" featured smart criminals and a smarter investigator? The indie film If I Didn't Care, with its dumb criminals and dumb cops, is a sort of "Double Stupidity."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
There is also something surgically sterile. The movie sounds as though it was recorded in a padded chamber instead of a bustling school, and it looks like it came from some alternate world, one that basks in the eternal sunshine of the spotless skin.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie takes us on a journey to an ugly, contentious period in our misty, ancient past - all the way back to four months ago, when "Apocalypto" came out.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Arch, wry and dry, with its exquisite wallpaper and impeccably blocked fedoras, Married Life is bracingly malicious noir for a while, a sort of gray-flannel-suit take on the Coen brothers' "Blood Simple." Every character seems morally capable of anything.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
I'd call it a depressing soft-core porn flick, but that overstates its titillation factor. Mainly it's just icky.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Not like a lump of coal in your stocking. Coal is useful; you can burn it. This movie is more like a lump of something Blitzen left behind after eating a lot of Mexican food.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Much closer to Scorsese than "Scarface," Notorious gives a heartfelt yet clear-eyed sendoff to the late Brooklyn rapper Christopher Wallace.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Much of this footage might have been illuminating, even fascinating, in 2003. But seven years on, it's ancient history lacking insight, hindsight or a fresh take.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
High praise for the movie Mother and Child: It's as good as a TV show. Although it's not as fine as HBO's "In Treatment," a show run by this movie's writer-director, Rodrigo Garcia.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie isn't insulting to homosexuals but to comedy.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Needlessly violent? No, Rambo is needfully violent. Johnny R. is a man constructed of violence.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Statham is an essential tough guy, what the Brits call "well'ard," as self-assured as Lee Marvin.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Shouldn’t Moore run his yellow crime-scene tape around the White House instead of Wall Street? Anyway, President Obama said this month that in cases where the government has fully sold its TARP bank holdings, it has gotten back its money plus 17 percent. Damn those capitalist barons, breaking into our treasury and filling it with their filthy money.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Shifting the self-deprecating japery of "High Fidelity" from a record store to a quiz show makes Starter for 10 a sweetly endearing date movie.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Hunger is almost silent, most of its sounds being unintelligible moans and screams.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A popcorn picture that thinks it’s “The Last Emperor,” The Karate Kid is about as likely to grab your youngster’s attention as any other propaganda film made by the Chinese government.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The Tillman Story purports to be an exposé of the cover-up of the death by friendly fire of the Army Ranger and one time NFL star Pat Tillman. But, provocative and colorful as the film is, it does the very thing it denounces -- massaging the facts to seize Tillman for a political agenda.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Sex Drive has shaky moments, and its smutty gags aren't edited so much as slammed together.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Raunchy frat comedies are as hard to pull off as any other kind because they have to keep surprising the audience, and The Hangover does with a bizarre series of uproarious situations with explanations that just about stay within the bounds of plausibility.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Say hello to my leetle dagger! Shakespeare meets "Scarface" in an Aussie adaptation of "Macbeth" gone gangsta.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A great abortion documentary might leave you guessing which side of the debate the director was on. Lake of Fire is not that film, but it comes somewhat close.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
On the M. Night Shyamalan scale of stupid endings, The Prestige isn't as bad as "The Village" but it's comparable to "Unbreakable."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The bite and bark of Underdog are both pretty awful, but little kids might take this pooch for a walk.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Ice Cube's well-worn performance as a wise old geezer is the only bright spot in a movie that otherwise fumbles every opportunity to be funny, exciting or insightful.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Superb Noo Yawk attitude, dialogue and performances (including one from the essential Kevin Corrigan, now well into his second decade of being indie movies' dirtbag on demand) keep the movie lively and tart.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Coppola works in weird ways, but the real Versailles was so much weirder.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A boldly original undertaking: It's the first movie ever to come up with the idea of remaking "The Truman Show."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The ingredients are there for a cute con game, but instead the movie turns out to be a mushy melodrama.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
As the movie's feet get stuck in its own misery, it made me appreciate "Trainspotting" all over again - its wit, how it moved, the way any outcome for its characters seemed possible.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
There is too much funny here for a movie (even though it continues into the closing credits). Step Brothers should be a TV show.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Sherlock Holmes dumbs down a century-old synonym for intelligence with S&M gags, witless sarcasm, murky bombast and twirling action-hero moves that belong in a ninja flick.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
We keep waiting for a story, or at least some comedy, but none ever materializes. The dialogue makes Algebra II seem fascinating by comparison.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
It's the Food Network meets The Weather Channel meets . . . the Scary Doomsday Preachers Channel.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The chick comedy-drama Catch and Release may look bland, but it's not. It's worse. To rise to the level of blandness, it would need to have a few gallons of Tabasco dumped into it.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
At times Halloween II dances on the line between alarming and disgusting, and it doesn’t all hold together — I couldn’t figure out what the goblin banquet was doing in this movie. But if it was meant to freak me out, it worked.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
As with "Capturing the Friedmans," the documentary is grueling to sit through. Yet the greasy, guilty thrill of being privy to your neighbors' most intimate dramas makes it impossible to stop watching.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Has buckets of gentle sincerity. Since there aren't any dumb jokes or hip visuals, it's easy to get caught up in the simple messages: Be good to your sister, don't be a bully, use your imagination in a pinch.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
If anything is frightening here, it's the scenes of the small children being indoctrinated into an organic lifestyle and being made to sing, at least three times, a song about the evils supposedly lurking in the environment around them.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A lukewarm film about what might happen to three New York City friends if the draft were reinstated, proves that even the most controversial of topics can be the basis for the dullest indie films.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
It follows exactly the same path as both "Glory Road" (except that was basketball) and "Gridiron Gang" (football).- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Larry the Cable Guy channels both Moe and Curly in the Three Stooges-go-to-war comedy Delta Farce.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Buzzes around in random menace for an hour until its third act, when - zzzzzt! - it flies straight into the zapper.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie all but proclaims U2 the world's best rock band. Somewhere, Mick Jagger's jaws are grinding.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Even if the movie had more shadings, though, Marshall's political point would undo his he-man action-flick format. If you're looking for a rallying cry to make the emotions sizzle, "Quagmire!" isn't it.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
How this thing got made in Hollywood is a mystery, but I laughed at most of it, especially the mean stereotypes about the French and the even meaner stereotype about England's soccer team.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
It's a cute idea that a better filmmaker than writer-director Michael Schroeder could have done a lot with.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The film is narrated by Russell Crowe, whose star power is probably the only reason it's being released here.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Po speaks loudly and carries big shtick. Let the rest of the world cringe at our hyperconfidence, our charisma, our pure awesomeness.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The film has enough funny lines and weird situations - some comedy business with a sex chair lovingly constructed by the Clooney character is the highlight - that it could age into a cult film like "The Big Lebowski."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The banality of evil has met its match in the banality of Good, a Holocaust parable that barely registers a pulse.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Even for a horror movie, The Crazies is a bore, and we're talking about the most boring genre this side of dysfunctional-family indie drama.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
This documentary, which begins at a low key, gradually becomes intense and psychologically complicated.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Alfred Molina gives a warm and engaging performance as an occupying British soldier.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Though Despicable Me is a little ragged on story, it's got a lot of imagination and a heart as warm as a fluffy kitty.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Dispenses with much of the caramel gooeyness of the first two episodes in favor of decent action, some heartfelt tender moments and even a splash of wit. This time they’re actually Twi-ing.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Actors tell us that dying is easy, comedy is hard. But comedies about dying are hardest of all.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The potential for suspense is dropped (there's a subplot about the receptionist's flight from her violent husband, but he appears in only a couple of scenes) in favor of lots of hushed interludes in which nothing happens.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Doesn't offer plot or an inquiry into the evil in men's hearts. It simply wallows in the filth and inhumanity that surround a father and his pre-adolescent son as they march across the shattered remains of this country.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
All three segments are heavy on blame-America speeches, which may be a fair snapshot of Iraqi opinion, but it's strange how fond Longley seems to be of Saddam Hussein.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
One of the pleasures of films about being stuck in a place -- "The Wicker Man" is maybe the best example -- comes from the skill with which the writers keep their protagonist locked in his box. On this test, The Last Exorcism pretty much flunks.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Watching I'm Reed Fish is like being forced to read the diary of a dull-witted teen who is breathlessly beginning a lifelong fascination with himself.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Thanks to an unexpected twist and a clever motivation lurking in the back story of the super-villain, G-Force has enough going on to more or less maintain grown-up interest, and there's plenty to please the kiddies.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie's last words are "This is how legends are born." Make that stillborn, because when the makers of this one pitch the sequel, the only answer is going to be, "Ah HA HA HA!"- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The film is a failure if it can't convince us that these two people belong together. It can't, and barely tries.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
What the Charles Darwin biopic Creation mainly creates is a do-over for Paul Bettany: This time he gets to have a beautiful mind.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
You know those one-joke "Saturday Night Live" sketches that start to age after six minutes? Blades of Glory is one joke that lasts 93 minutes, costs $11 and could involve sitting next to a guy who retells the movie into his cellphone.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
This is a one-joke skit that trots in a straight line, and your enjoyment of it will depend entirely on how many times you need to see gonzo sheep rip out human entrails.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
What happens when several characters' lives intertwine with the maggot-infested corpse of a prostitute in The Dead Girl? A whole lot of crying.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Almost without exception, the men are either sickening deviants or wise mentors while the ladies tend to be kickboxing hipsters or victims of sexual abuse (many are both).- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A warning: One scene in the middle is almost outrageously cruel and graphic. If you're the type of person who has to be reminded, "It's only a movie," stay away. This is the most depraved and dreadful piece of screen horror since last year's "Funny Games."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The best Parisian action movie of the week is District 13: Ultimatum, a serviceable thriller with a lefty message.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie begins to wear out its welcome even before a conclusion of breathtaking corniness.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
This spoof of "The Da Vinci Code," "Pirates of the Caribbean," "Harry Potter," "The Chronicles of Narnia" and other recent blockbusters piles up sex gags, toilet gags and make-you-gag gags.- New York Post
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Tired? This series is as exhausted as Shrek after a day of baby wrangling and diaper changing.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
It puts a conservative twist on Michael Moore-ism, with campy stock footage, deadpan humor, mocking musical cues and less-than-ingenuous questions.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Rickman has fun playing a lecherous old bastard of a professor in Nobel Son, a pulpy would-be comic thriller, but the movie doesn't deserve him.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Holmes, with Alice Cooper hair and crazy Jim Carrey eyes, looks terrible and acts worse, unless this movie is unintentionally a lobotomy documentary. Whatever could have happened to her in the last couple of years to zap the talent out of her like this?- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Martin Short as Jack Frost, means we're getting a turkey and a ham for the holidays. As for Tim Allen as Scott Calvin, an ordinary guy who took over Santa's job by chance, he's more like a tasteless lump of mashed potatoes.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
There have been worse horror flicks, but although this one offers a few scares, it doesn't have a lot of imagination.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Role Models isn't a classic like "Superbad" or as hilarious as this summer's "Step Brothers," but it's excellent fun for males in the mental age bracket of 14 to 22, which is most males.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Unless the director was aiming for a Victorian "Black Christmas," though, he overshot his mark- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie hopes to be regarded as childlike too, but there's a difference between kid-friendly and just regular old dumb.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Among the year's ultraviolent pulp movies, "Sin City" was prettier and "The Devil's Rejects" more focused.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
"Babe" was a classic because of its gentle simplicity. Charlotte's Web, with its insistently "magical" theme music, an overbearing climax and a trough full of bad jokes, is merely adequate.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The film is occasionally heavy-handed, and the priest character is almost absurdly saintly, but there is an awful power to scenes such as one in which the Europeans are evacuated on trucks.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie has enough big-city wickedness and merry cruelty to keep things skittering unpredictably.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The Last King of Scotland is a parable shocking in its truth, jolting in its lack of sentimentality, Shakespearean in its vision of the doctor's catastrophic flaw.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Like one of those five-minute featurettes on star athletes deployed to soak up time on the pregame show -- expanded to a paralytic length.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
There's a reason you've never seen the words "Will Forte" topping the billing of a major motion picture. After the throbbing flameball of unfunny that is MacGruber, you never will again.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Williams appears to be having trouble keeping his eyes open, and the audience will, too.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie is neither an affecting romance (Coco even considers marrying Balsan because "I'd achieve social status") nor an inspiring success story. Chanel sold herself to one guy, happened to get customers through him, and took a start-up loan from another lover.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
As things pick up in the second half, the splendid photography and tempestuous John Adams score cannot quite conceal that the film is uncomfortably close to being an extravagantly elongated, Fendi-clad episode of "Dynasty."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Edward Norton plays Ray, a (possibly) honest cop wearing an unexplained scar positioned just so on his cheek. It looks like it was bought in the markdown aisle of Halloween Mart on Nov. 1.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Everything is predictable three scenes in advance, and it's all stale, stuck, stolid.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Though thin on story, the film shows poise and vision, using bleak cinema-realité techniques with chilling effect. Campos promises to be heard from again.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Among cutesy pop musical trios aimed at nondiscerning audiences, I'll take Alvin and Co. over the Jonas Brothers any day.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
October Country doesn't really have a point, or a story, but it's an almost unbearably vivid portrait of four generations in a single working-class family.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
If I wanted to spend $10.75 making myself sick, I'd buy a bottle of cheap tequila.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The computer-generated flying effects are the only reason to see the movie, but at some point somebody left the computer on too long, so it went ahead and spat out the script.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie is at its best when Gekko gets back into the game, with his impish smile and his perfect hair.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A sometimes insightful, sometimes absurdly devotional but steadily engaging film.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
It’s as if a ruthless gang of Richie Cunninghams terrorized the Fonzies of the world.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The more dramatic revelations and tragic inevitabilities that turn up, the harder it is not to laugh. Give credit to its maker for directing with an earnestness suggesting a pretentious 22-year-old. Having passed through the phases of Interesting Apprentice, Mad Genius, Chastened Bankrupt and Shameless Wage Slave, Coppola at 70 may be the world's oldest student filmmaker.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
One of the few monster-crocodile movies that simultaneously tries to rip off "Jaws" and "Meet the Press."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie approaches the final scene with a straight face, but it left the audience giggling spasmodically. This script probably should have gone all the way and thrown in a few quips: If your movie is a joke, at least be intentionally funny.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
As a former president of the United States remarked, "Childrens do learn," and what they learn in the heartbreaking yet thrillingly hopeful documentary Waiting for 'Superman' is that adults are finally starting to notice how badly kids have been betrayed by teachers unions.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Its characters are likable enough to settle in with for a pleasant hour and a half.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Their conversation is so insipid that watching this movie is no more interesting than talking to any random New York couple about what makes them tick.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
WARNING: Do not take your mom to Georgia Rule unless she's Roseanne Barr. You may expect a three-generational chick flick, but what you get is a child-rape comedy.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A barbell of a movie that carries some weight at either end. What's in between is purely utilitarian, though.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie is still a mess, stumbling from comic-relief scenes that aren't funny to a job-training interlude in which we learn that, among other things, owls make excellent . . . blacksmiths?- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
With its array of chases and shootouts and a sinister political plot, the movie at least holds your attention and keeps things brisk-ish. But every scene still bears the tags of the place from which it was stolen.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
There can only ever be one Bad Lieutenant: Harvey Keitel. In Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans, Nicolas Cage, pretend tough guy (Malibu accent, long floppy coiffure, nervous smile), is more like the Bad Used-Car Salesman.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
An amusingly preposterous last act keeps you guessing, or maybe keeps you ducking, as it lets rip an avalanche of startling revelations and double-crosses. Nothing is what it seems - unless it seems cheesy.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The bickering and mishaps make for a semi-enjoyable if low-impact film that may appeal to the kind of nostalgics who buy Time-Life collections of '60s songmeisters.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The atmosphere is convincing - there is an "Eight Mile" desperation to Raya's plight - but nothing makes sense.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Calls to mind Grandpa taking out his dentures and trying to put on a comedy monster show for little kids at Halloween: When he tries to be scary, he's goofy, but when he tries to be goofy, he's scary.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The chatty killer and the nervy atmosphere are both so depraved that the film, though it contains hardly any explicit violence, is like stepping into a blood Jacuzzi, and there is a biblical severity to the ending.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
This kids' cartoon from France is such a surreally demented attempt to connect with children that it's the equivalent of foie gras breakfast cereal or a bleu cheese milkshake.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
There isn't anything especially wrong with Who Do You Love but there's nothing here that cries out to be seen, either. Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/entertainment/movies/who_do_you_love_VZgyGvsv0ruc9teHrzQIlJ#ixzz0kcaj8Mwl- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Fighting arrives fully charged by the charisma of its star, Channing Tatum, who has landed the lead in the upcoming "G.I. Joe."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
So swaddled in good intentions that it's like taking a very short journey cushioned on all sides by air bags. That are stuffed with cotton candy.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Some bits are too stagy, but for the most part this long night feels like an interview that could have actually happened. Miller is so good - dumb, smart, wounded, wounding, a lollipop of sweet poison that you'd buy every day until it killed you - that you feel you not only understand her but all actresses.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
As sensuous as its title, Silk is an exquisitely felt love story that unfolds as delicately as a blooming flower. And as slowly.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
With its dopey fight scenes, grimy look and goopy gore, this movie is so far from ept that inept is the wrong word. It's anti-ept.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Even for a French drama, Summer Hours is so slow as to be practically still.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
For a horny-road-trip flick that's actually funny, check out last year's "Sex Drive," which just came out on video.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
88 Minutes holds you in a state of acute suspense, keeping you wondering until the very last minute whether this is the worst Al Pacino movie ever made.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Wanted is like a 12-armed heavy-metal drummer after a case of Red Bull, flailing and thundering through two hours of impossible action.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
It's another flick about maps, landmarks and buried treasure that makes "The Da Vinci Code" look like TOLSTOY.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Possibly the least sexy vampire flick ever to crawl out of the crypt (it never occurs to anyone that biting someone's neck is kinda intimate; the act is strictly utilitarian), but it's unusually detailed in its imagining.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Everyone's Hero, a tame CGI cartoon for the simple-minded: the very young, the very old and Yankee fans.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
For short stretches, the movie has a touch of surreal "Office Space" brilliance, but it's broadly acted, its characters are thin, and the production values are ragged. Still, it's hard to resist its goofy hostility: "You're like the drummer from REO Speedwagon. Nobody knows who you are."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
As familiar as the costumes and decoration are, the conflicts are unsettlingly vivid and strange.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The film is Beverly Hills Chihuahua. The audience is the fire hydrant.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The script, narrated by Queen Latifah, is so embarrassingly dorky (it was co-written by Kristin Gore) that it's like Fred Rogers gone hip-hop.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The anti-Ben Stiller comedy: There's humiliation aplenty but no mugging, no abuse to the crotch region, no straining to be outrageous.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Your enjoyment will hinge entirely on whether you think the album is a masterpiece or a bore.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
An Irish indie that is well-observed and well-acted - but ultimately, not much more exciting than the love lives of its lead characters.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Salt contains many conflicts: intelligence vs. counterintelligence, blond Angelina vs raven-haired and . . . well, that's about it.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
John Travolta's From Paris With Love assassin/ superagent Charlie Wax is the master of whatever the opposite of wisecracking is. Fooljoshing? Lametalking? Flatlining?- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Combines the sweet strangeness of "Fargo" with the existential panic of "Memento" and some Elmore Leonard tough talk. It all creates a cinematic tummy ache.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie doesn't do anything with these viney bastards. There's no back story, no satire, no allegory, no implications beyond what's happening on the pyramid.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The thing is a virtual remake of the fusty oldie "Sweet Home Alabama," which came out back when movie scripts were written on stone tablets.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Problem: Kidman is the only one in the theater who is turned on. The rest of us are giggling.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
But improbable situations, heavy reliance on coincidence and an improbable climax nearly tip the film into TV-movie territory.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The funniest movie of Smith's I've seen. It's "When Harry Did Sally."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Yet the moral at the end is that we should all be more tolerant of different cultures. Is that really true, though, if the culture you're trying to tolerate is trying to open your skull with a circular saw?- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Has the kind of soulful subject matter that will strike some as profoundly emotional, but it gets a flag for roughing the tear ducts. This isn't football - it's cornball.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Considering that Gracie says nothing that hasn't been said in dozens of films, one does wonder whether Hollywood is being as diligent as it could be in digging up fresh story ideas.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The last time I saw this much talent in a losing cause was Super Bowl XLII. Trying to mix farce with heart, Drillbit Taylor is instead as soulful as Kenny G and as wacky as public television.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
89 minutes go by like 89 hours. Not just 89 regular hours either: 89 hours of being stuck in an airport. During a blizzard. While Lewis Black sleeps drooling on your shoulder.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
When the studio tells us that parental guidance is suggested, does it occur to them that they should have taken their own advice?- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A buffet of dumb and degrading stunts halfway between Looney Tunes and Abu Ghraib?- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
I won't reveal the twist -- but the marketing crew is aware that their only chance of selling this non-mind-blowing documentary about the people you might meet on Facebook is by promising a big surprise.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Two fins up for The Cove, a documentary that whales on evil Japanese fishermen who kill dolphins for lunch meat.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The strange thing about the movie is its idea that such couples are rare flowers. But you can scarcely take a step in Seattle or San Francisco or Los Feliz without meeting them in hordes.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
If you've seen "Gone With the Wind," you've seen what Love in the Time of Cholera isn't.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Among cheesy sci-fi movies meant to make you think, I'll take Surrogates over "District 9." Both are highly derivative, but in the course of recombining the basic chromosomes of "Blade Runner," "The Matrix" and especially "I, Robot," Surrogates nudges the robo-thriller in an interesting direction.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie pretty much exists to sell tie-in products, and it's about as entertaining as watching little kids playing with their toys in the sandbox.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
This spring, boredom has a new name: Lucky You. In the poker flick, an announcer calling a climactic poker match uses a Texas hold 'em term frequently, saying, "And the flop. And the flop. And the flop." This movie reviews itself.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Aheroin-stuffed hipster buys a dog, eats Vietnamese food and sells drugs to pay for rehab in Fix, the latest piece of cine-junk stamped out by the indie fakedocumentary factory.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
As DJ, Columbus Short eases his way through the movie without trying to impress us too much, which is welcome, but he's also a little bland around the edges.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie is a gentle British ensemble comedy much like "Four Weddings and a Funeral" - minus the four weddings and four-fifths of the wit.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Despite the pace, though -- pedal, have you met my friend metal? -- Ninja Assassin still has some of its best stuff left at the end, when the master returns to demonstrate his extra-special, super-most-deadliest technique.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
So laugh-poor that it shoves all its comedy chips on a bet that you can build a movie around nose gags.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
At the end, as I stumbled back onto the street as disoriented and grateful as a released POW, I thought I'd need a calendar to calculate the length of time I'd been away.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
This film is headed quickly for DVD. In the video store, though, it isn't funny enough to be shelved in the comedy section nor dirty enough to be filed with the smut. It might be useful in propping up a wobbly chair, though.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Someday, The Bounty Hunter and last month’s “Cop Out” will be featured in a cable movie double bill as the two worst 1988 films of 2010.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
They go on a biker trip from Cincinnati to the West Coast because they are tired of being bored and would prefer to bore us instead.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Instead of trying to make Austen's life entertaining by pretending it was just like her work - as in the dull recent French movie "Molière" - Becoming Jane has a more astute appreciation of how Austen, or any fiction writer, works. There's a bit of stealing from life, lots of exaggeration, some wish fulfillment, mix-and-match character assembly.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A comedy for no ages, has an amazing amount of CGI - Cuba Gooding Incompetence.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A serial-killer flick told like an art lecture, Anamorph manages to be gruesome yet dull.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Its personal, newsmagazine touch will make your heart ache for its cross-section of humanity.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Cheap, ignorant, tone-deaf and condescending, but what's strangest about it is that it actually thinks it's pro-soldier even as it portrays vets home on leave as foolish (Rachel McAdams), desperate (Tim Robbins) and dishonorable (Michael Pena) while playing all three situations for laughs.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Rising star Michael Shannon makes a riveting shamus hired to chase a runaway husband in the quiet but resonant little noir The Missing Person.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Despite the lingering aroma of Victorian rot shrouding 1961, An Education is excitingly young.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Some movies present their whole story in a two-minute trailer, but Gridiron Gang says it all in its poster.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The ever-excitable Martin Scorsese, who is listed as a producer and who pops up, bizarrely, to talk about how he decided to stage the last shot of "The Departed," concludes things by saying, "Cubism was not a style. It was a revolution!" Yep. And not in any way a fad.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Great actors make the craft look easy. In the Paris Hilton comedy The Hottie and the Nottie, acting looks very, very difficult.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Misses everything that made the first one eat into your spine like meningitis.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
It's got enough going on to sustain five blockbuster thrillers. That is its blessing and its curse.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
It's something old, it's something new, it's something borrowed and it's something that blows.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
It'll be a real miracle if anyone manages to stay awake throughout this extravagantly dull film.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
This movie -- G.I. Joke, The D-Team -- tries to do so little, and yet falls so short. A clue comes when the girl asks Clay, "How's your steak?" and he replies, "Meaty." Simple enough to achieve in theory, but this would-be treat for cinematic carnivores is a sawdust sandwich.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The men who made The Guardian strive to be the averagest of the average - and don't quite succeed.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Halfway through, the jokes stop - the laughs never began - and give way to a tiresome thriller.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
We may not need another IRA movie, but even so, Ken Loach's Brit-bashing historical drama The Wind That Shakes the Barley, winner of the top prize at Cannes last year, raises hard questions about Ireland's uncanny ability to kneecap itself.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
There isn't enough revealing material in the tedious documentary Jimmy Carter Man From Plains to sustain an 800-word magazine profile, let alone a two-hour film.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A black-and-white fantasia shot against a bright backdrop of famous sites, and it has potential to be a cult hit on its dreamy-hipster look alone.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A movie that features Wahlberg suggesting everyone try to outrun the wind can barely be watched once.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Giving Mrs. Tiger Woods a run for her money as the most humiliated celebrity of the month, Russell Crowe accepts a third-banana role in the laughable weepie Tenderness.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
One of those Deep Dark Secret movies, the dull indie Lake City combines a wholly uninteresting family mystery with a wholly unconvincing crime drama.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
New Moon is supposed to be an exciting love story plus monster action. So where’s the excitement? Where’s the action?- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
In the Land of Women is one of those films informed by intimate personal experience - the experience of seeing "Garden State."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Ridiculous comedies can be fine, but the ones that matter creep up close to the truth. This one lives in it.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The would-be noir Beyond a Rea sonable Doubt has an absurd story, but on the plus side you can hardly see what's going on because the photography is so murky.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
There's a pleasing tension in the air as their relationship comes to seem like something of a contest: With two women this needy, who will out-crazy the other?- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A viral blast of the American Dream. It's "Rocky" with a briefcase.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The film gets one star from me for the admirable brevity of its running time and another for the definite article in its title, seemingly an implicit promise that there will be no sequel.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Isn't especially hilarious, but it has a warm sense of humor instead of a string of gross-out jokes. It'll be a cable mainstay.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Zombieland is still the funniest broad comedy since "The Hangover." Its yowling, marching, munching corpses are as scary as grad students and as hilarious as the plot of "G.I. Joe."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
If Young ever converses with the gentlemen from al Qaeda, I expect his comments to be along the lines of "Please don't cut my head off."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
De Palma is extreme, visceral, usually in bad taste but almost always riveting. De Palma's Redacted, a no-budget fake documentary that imagines the circumstances behind a real rape and murder of a civilian girl committed by US troops in Iraq, is a piece of anti-war propaganda whose aims I don't agree with, but it jolted me nonetheless.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
The movie chides us for being a sick voyeuristic society, hungry for the sight of violence. The purity of this moral stance is somewhat clouded by the movie's habit of staging sick violent acts.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Based on the true story of the world's largest counterfeiting operation, The Counterfeiters is full of the weird details that, though unsurprising on one level, are so jarringly wrong that they seem fresh: As a reward for producing 134 million pounds sterling, the prisoners get a pingpong table.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Either a ludicrously bad movie or a parody of same. Either way, it's pretty funny.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
"HP6" is suspenseful and artfully realized. It's a definite improvement over J.K. Rowling's dimly written and exposition-clogged book.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
Rolls out stiff clichés to tell a familiar story of racial injustice in the South.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Kyle Smith
A decent football movie, just about good enough to be the 40th best episode of "Friday Night Lights" . . . which has aired 39 episodes.- New York Post
- Read full review