Lou Lumenick
Select another critic »For 2,489 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
46% higher than the average critic
-
2% same as the average critic
-
52% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 9.4 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Lou Lumenick's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 56 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Band Wagon | |
| Lowest review score: | Dirty Cop No Donut | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 1,242 out of 2489
-
Mixed: 549 out of 2489
-
Negative: 698 out of 2489
2489
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
There have been many untraditional film adaptations of Shakespeare's, but few have been as unorthodox as this one.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Wojtowicz was a folk hero thanks to the movie, and he cashed in on his celebrity by signing autographs in front of the bank he tried to rob. He also retained the love and support of his wife and his doting mother, both of whom are interviewed with him in The Dog, until his death in 2006.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 6, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Arriving two days before the 10th anniversary of 9/11, Steven Soderbergh's Contagion is a serious all-star thriller about the rapid worldwide spread of a killer virus that's easily the scariest of the disaster films that have followed the attack.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 9, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Makes "Training Day" -- which was admittedly pretty tough -- seem like a Disney cartoon by comparison.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Truth is, this story of the out-of-control director and his inexperienced, enabling studio heads -- who allowed Cimino to lock them out of the editing room, hoping he would deliver another Oscar winner like "The Deer Hunter" -- is more compelling than Cimino's long-winded epic.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A lively score by Danny Elfman and some of the most dramatic sound-effects work since the Three Stooges only add to the appeal of Deep Sea 3-D.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
An excellent way to teach children that movies don't begin and end with Hollywood blockbusters.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Those with a high tolerance for violence and gore — at one point, Rama battles assassins labeled “Baseball Bat Man’’ and “Hammer Girl’’ simultaneously — will eat up The Raid 2.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 26, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The Heat, which provides enough opportunity for wholesale mayhem as well as laughs, is pretty much a guaranteed crowd-pleaser.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 27, 2013
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Using a hand-held microphone, Mahurin captures the burly, middle-age, salty-tongued cook philosophizing nonstop as he individually prepares mouth-watering high-cholesterol meals from a 900-item menu over a stove he has put together himself.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Van Sant's audacious, poetic and emotionally distanced film doesn't even have a plot. It's just a random series of incidents one day at a suburban high school.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It's an odd, initially jarring mixture of style and subject matter that works better as the film goes along.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Nostalgic for those bad old days, The Wackness was shot at a time when it actually looked like "America's Mayor" was going to be in a position to perform a similar cleanup on the entire country. That, of course, turned out to be a pipe dream.- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Pulls no punches - blood flows very freely (including the ear-cutting scene) and black humor abounds.- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Reichardt doesn't so much tell a story as paint a finely detailed portrait of human suffering in this miniature marvel.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Holds less water as a mystery because its plot holes - and choppy pacing - make it seem as disconnected from reality as its hero. But Jackson is so frighteningly effective, and affecting, as Romulus that you're sucked in anyway.- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Strikingly photographed, Maelstrom, which explores its nautical themes in non-linear fashion, is not for all tastes. But I, for one, was hooked by this fish's tale.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Rarely less than compelling, must-see entertainment, thanks to Farrell, Schumacher and company.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
This warped masochistic cousin to David Cronenberg's "Crash" - not to be confused with the Oscar winner of the same name - is well worth seeing for Farmiga's stunning performance.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
In his later years, Smith, who was also a gifted photographer, largely abandoned films in favor of performance art - and his art apparently included deliberately contracting the AIDS that ended his life.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Fight Club badly wants to be "A Clockwork Orange" for the millennium - and succeeds to a surprising extent until director David Fincher ends up sucker-punching the audience.- New York Post
-
- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Much more rewarding than its earnest title or its very modest production values -- it's basically an ambitious home video -- would suggest.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Sometimes gets repetitive and is slightly overlong. But it's got solid performances.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Check your brains at the popcorn stand and hang on for a spectacular ride.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
That 20-minute white-knuckle sequence - which includes Washington's character, Whip Whitaker, flipping the plane upside down to pull out of a tailspin - is by far the most effective part of director Robert Zemeckis' first live-action film since the underrated "Cast Away" 12 years ago.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It's what Hollywood calls a 'tweener - not quite edgy or artistic enough to satisfy the art-house crowd, but a tough sell for family audiences because of its extensive subtitles, two-hour-plus running time, and a (tastefully rendered) male rape scene.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A gleaming hunk of French period schmaltz expertly rendered by director Christophe Barratier.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It also boasts a killer breakout performance by comic Patton Oswalt as a former classmate who becomes Theron's unlikely co-dependent and sometimes co-conspirator.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 9, 2011
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Limps to a fairly lame conclusion, but until then its remarkable candor is like spending a memorably hilarious, harrowing and unforgettable weekend with your wacky in-laws.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It’s not exactly giving away anything to reveal that Stamp also sings three numbers in Unfinished Song — the last one so stirring that you should bring at least one box of Kleenex.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 20, 2013
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Mostly it’s up to Lawrence to wring all the drama and pathos she can out of a battle over patent rights that pushes Joy to the brink of bankruptcy. No surprise that her mettle cleans up all the messiness in Joy.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 22, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Pepe Danquart's To the Limit from Germany looks great, but it's an altogether different animal.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The new "Pelham," although no classic, is a lot of fun if you're in the right mood.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Plays like a very good TV movie. Short on visual flair and starpower, Thirteen Days is not the definitive story of the Cuban missile crisis, but it's an engrossing historical lesson nonetheless.- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Accurately described as an Icelandic version of Pedro Almodovar's gender-bending black comedies -- but it's also reminiscent of early Woody Allen movies.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
At heart, The Italian is a Dickensian tale that paints a vivid portrait of post-Glasnost Russia en route to a four-handkerchief ending.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The Good Lie may not be anything like Witherspoon’s version of “The Blind Side” (as the ads also imply), but it’s a heart-tugger that’s definitely worth seeing.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 1, 2014
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Posted Feb 17, 2012
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A Tom Cruise action flick with a strong female heroine and a sense of humor? Edge of Tomorrow has both of those, plus a “Groundhog Day’’-style gimmick that pays big dividends. Over and over.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 4, 2014
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The action is brutal, bloody and virtually nonstop in this adrenaline-packed riff on "Assault on Precinct 13.''- New York Post
- Posted Mar 23, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
This isn't a mystery except in the most general sense. It's a dense, Altman-esque psychological drama centering on 10 characters whose lives become as tangled as the lantana.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A gorgeously photographed and less intermittently fascinating 2 1/2-hour film.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Mostly a well-acted, expertly directed comedy with characters and situations of truly universal appeal.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The image that sticks with you here is a smoky pub where the patrons are singing "You Belong to Me.''- New York Post
- Posted Mar 23, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Arguably the darkest episode in the entire series (and the first to carry a PG-13 rating) the visually stunning "Sith" is also the fastest-paced and most accessible.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Posted May 20, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A fascinating, sad, sometimes quite poetic window into a grueling way of life most of us know little about.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Offers highly effective performances by a cast of real-life employees without previous acting experience, who also collaborated on the intriguing screenplay.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Not a very visually interesting documentary its simply one head talking to the audience, with no film clips, photographs or other diversions. But its awfully hard to turn away.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Doesn't quite reach the heights - though it does plumb the depths - of its hugely popular predecessor. But it will have an enormous, appreciative audience doubled over with belly-busting laughs.- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Honestly, it's still pretty hard to resist as a guilty pleasure: A fluffy date-night movie that wrung a tear or two from more than one hardened male critic's eyes, chick flick or no.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Stewart's intense, courageous performance as a 16-year-old New Orleans prostitute is really something special.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 11, 2010
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A rare film offering from Mongolia, is an unusual, captivating and crowd-pleasing semi-documentary about an extended family of camel herders -- and two of their flock.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Excellent performances in an entertaining if less than totally plausible story.- New York Post
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Basically, this tale of a pregnant waitress looking for a way out of an unhappy marriage is a funny and touching riff on Martin Scorsese's "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore," not to mention its better-known sitcom spinoff, "Alice."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Dashing, handsome and self-deprecating, Kevin Kline was born to play Errol Flynn.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 29, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Dreamgirls may be good enough to win the Oscar for Best Picture - great costumes, sets and choreography help - but despite stellar work by erstwhile "American Idol" contestant Hudson and Murphy, it's far from a great picture.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
In a season of hyperven tilating political docu mentaries - witness Michael Moore and his imitators - Ross McElwee shows just how far subtlety can go with his latest charming effort, Bright Leaves.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Moves at a poky pace even by American indie standards. But it's worth checking out for the fine cast, which also includes Joanna Lumley as Rossellini's earthy pal, and scene-stealing Doreen Mantle as her tart-tongued but wise mother.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 13, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Sticks to reporting. Unlike most political documentaries, it doesn't preach - to the choir or to anyone else.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It's powerful stuff, and probably a more effective approach than a series of talking heads decrying bullying, which is estimated to affect 18 million American children.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The Infiltrator satisfyingly builds to an improbable but ripped-from-the-headlines climax.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The musicians' stories, while quite entertaining, add up to a somewhat confusing chronology. Still, they're good enough that you wish Justman hadn't resorted to those tacky TV-style re-creations that mar so many documentaries these days.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It’s an absorbing documentary that eloquently explores questions about forgiveness.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 7, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
There's very little doubt in my mind that somewhere, culinary legend Julia Child is fuming about being consigned to a double bio-pic with a whiny, self-centered cooking blogger.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A huge hit in China — where it was released in 3-D IMAX — the handsomely filmed Journey To the West deserves better than the token 2-D theatrical release it’s getting in the United States to support its simultaneous arrival on video-on-demand.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 6, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It succeeds mostly thanks to stellar work by the wonderful Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who capably handles the dramatic heavy lifting, and Seth Rogen, who delivers big laughs as his raunchy bud.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Some editing would have made The Nice Guys easier to love — at times it feels as bloated as Crowe’s gut. It’s neither as fast, fresh or as funny as Black’s “Kiss Kiss Bang Bang’’ (2005).- New York Post
- Posted May 19, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The Coen brothers might have done something inspired with this, but director Kanievska... turns out a more modestly entertaining little low-budget movie.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
This is noir on steroids, cartoonishly ultra-violent and drawing inspiration from Mickey Spillane novels and E.C. comics of the '50s.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
When disaster struck, the documentary says, the powerful corps went to extraordinary lengths to silence, discredit and punish whistleblowers, many of whose allegations were supported by congressional investigators.- New York Post
- Posted May 20, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Does a solid job of documenting the life and art of the drag grand dame, whose life has been almost as tumultuous as the characters played by the Hollywood divas he channels.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
This is a gifted director who actually has something to say and knows how to say it. We'll be hearing from him again.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It might not have as many gut-busting laughs as "Bridesmaids,'' but there are still plenty - and for once in Apatow's phallocentric universe, most of them don't come at the expense of female characters.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Jeffrey Schwarz’s documentary is a fine, touching tribute to John Waters’ larger-than-life drag diva, Divine.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 25, 2013
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Brewer, who romanticized the world of pimps and ho's in "Hustle & Flow," is obviously out to push some politically incorrect buttons with this ludicrous - yet, in the end, sweetly involving - Southern Gothic pulp yarn.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Solid entertainment value for the money, but those who think it's saying anything new or profound are kidding themselves.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It's fun, but the script, credited to Hossein Amini ("The Wings of the Dove"), is short on characterization and long on plot twists and wisecracks.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 16, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Rob the Mob, which is more fun and more tightly constructed than “American Hustle,’’ romanticizes the clueless couple, whom the columnist dubs “Bonnie and Clyde,” and moves their inevitable Christmas Eve date with fate from Ozone Park to a far more attractive location.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 20, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A slick, sweet, fast-paced, feel-good romantic fantasy that's fairly irresistible if you can keep your cynicism in check for a couple of hours.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
This satisfying adaptation of a popular novel is mostly an artistic reflection on youthful loss of innocence.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Kids will love African Cats, which is full of "aw" moments. Their parents will appreciate that narrator Samuel L. Jackson keeps things from getting too schmaltzy in this true-life depiction of the circle of life.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 22, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The agent in this interesting little thriller — well played by John Cusack — is up to the Company’s usual dirty tricks.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Sarandon gets great support from a cast that includes J.K. Simmons as a laid-back retired cop who pursues Minnie, and Jason Ritter as the ex-boyfriend whom Minnie desperately plots to reunite with her daughter.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 21, 2016
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Anything following that spectacular sequence is bound to be something of a letdown - especially when it ends up playing like standard-issue Hollywood melodrama.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Will no doubt figure prominently in the awards season. But be warned, you can cut the gloom with a knife.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Refreshing for its simplicity and its originality in a marketplace dominated by soulless blockbusters.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Elvis & Nixon is the funniest Nixon movie since 1999’s forgotten “Dick.” That comedy was a Watergate-era fantasy, but as incredible as it seems, this one is based more or less directly on fact. A photograph of the meeting is the most requested image at the National Archives.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 21, 2016
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Through it all, Clayman struggles to keep himself, and OC87, on track - and it's easy to cheer his ultimate triumph.- New York Post
- Posted May 25, 2012
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Posted Oct 11, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A cut above the season’s other belated sequels like “My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2’’ and “Zoolander 2.’’- New York Post
- Posted Apr 14, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Patrick Stewart has a blast playing against type as a soft-spoken white supremacist holding a punk rock band as his temporary prisoners in Jeremy Saulnier’s nicely crafted, low-budget comedy-thriller.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 14, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Joshua falls a bit flat at the end, but overall it delivers some genuine old-school chills - something that was missing when Macaulay Culkin played a similar role in "The Good Son."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Hollywood's umpteenth tale of robots run amok is surprisingly smart, cool-looking, nicely paced and well-acted.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
About the only question not answered by Good Hair is whether Michelle Obama wears a hair extension (most come from religious ceremonies in India) or straightens her hair.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A thorough but highly entertaining documentary details the making of the notorious 1972 film, the series of legal battles that helped make it immensely popular and the flick's considerable cultural legacy.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A witty and wise midlife comedy, not only represents Peter Riegert's debut as a feature director but gives this gifted veteran performer his juiciest big-screen role in quite some time.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
This wacky former Andy Warhol superstar more than holds your interest in an offbeat documentary.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Dryly funny, adult-oriented animation -- hand-drawn on computers in a simple but captivating style by the husband-and-wife team.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 15, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Very slowly builds to an emotional payoff in a devastating scene where the three main characters simultaneously seek relief in sex.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Fast, furious and often funny. But no blood is truly shed (except literally in a playground fight during the opening credits).- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Doesn't sugarcoat the difficulties faced by this family, but this small gem has a very satisfying ending.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It's full of funny stuff, from a hitman forced to drag along his 3-year-old when he can't get a sitter, to one of the goons being asked, "Do you have a Web presence?"- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It's a tribute to the filmmakers and cast that by the end of Lars and the Real Girl, you can almost accept that Bianca is, well, a real girl.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Like legendary producer Val Lewton in the '40s, director Oren Peli, who shot "Paranormal" in seven days in his own home, understands that what's most frightening is what you don't see but merely suggested.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Though Iris is extremely well-acted and beautifully photographed, some audience members may find themselves agreeing with Bayley's frustrated complaint: "I've never known who you are."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Deploying an impeccable American accent, Brit Henry Cavill may be as charming as the late great Christopher Reeve.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 10, 2013
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Has enough heart and smarts to recommend it as one of the season's worthier family entertainments.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Posted Jun 30, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Paved with such good intentions and talent that it's sad to report this lavishly mounted gangster epic - the most serious-minded Hollywood film of the season - doesn't come close to living up to expectations.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
While there are plenty of laughs, Hunt doesn't play this for farce. Even Midler gives perhaps the most restrained, and arguably the most winning, performance of her screen career.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Could easily have become a schmaltzy variation on “Whiplash.” But it’s not, thanks to astringent direction by François Girard (“The Red Violin’’), an excellent cast and heavenly young voices.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 1, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
James Rasin's documentary is surprisingly the first to focus on one of Warhol's biggest attractions, the attractive male-to-female transsexual Candy Darling, best known for inspiring Lou Reed's song "A Walk on the Wild Side."- New York Post
- Posted Apr 22, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Taylor also makes an impressive comeback as the conflicted daughter who instinctively distrusts Heather, but Starting Out in the Evening is first and foremost a triumph by Frank Langella.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
One of the better political documentaries flooding into theaters after "Fahrenheit 9/11" and before the election.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Posted May 25, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Jim Carrey mostly plays it straight as the narrator. The 3-D effects are uncanny; much of the audience ducked when sea snakes lunged at it. You can't get that on your TV set. Yet.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Blue Jasmine may sound like a topical satire, but it isn’t really. It’s a character study of an obnoxious, selfish and supremely self-absorbed woman oblivious to the pain she inflicts on others.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 26, 2013
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
This rousingly sweet little flick is certainly nothing to go out of your way to avoid.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Ends up taking enough detours to keep DreamWorks' latest animated epic from striking cinematic gold.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Hope Springs could have been unbearably schmaltzy or crude. Instead, in the hands of these expert actors and filmmakers, it's a warm and wryly affecting mid-summer treat.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 8, 2012
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Beautifully shot by Michael J. Ozier, the dominating taste in Bottle Shock is Rickman's beautiful performance as a snob - a snob who is secretly open to being delightfully surprised.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
What follows is a hilarious, slam-bang series of chases and battles that cross "Gremlins" with "Assault on Precinct 13," the two most prominent of many genre films quoted by Attack the Block.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 29, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A highly personal, provocative and in some ways riveting vision with an inspired performance by Jim Caviezel as Jesus.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The cinematic equivalent of meat loaf -- comfort food that's reassuring in its utter lack of sophistication and surprises.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
No "Girl on the Bridge," but this comic thriller does generate a fair amount of erotic tension and sly commentary on psychoanalysis.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Posted Apr 28, 2016
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
All-too-familiar and schmaltzy territory for both coming-of-age films and movies with elderly actors.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
May have a storyline as generic as its title, but in the explosive Pacino and the smoldering Farrell (who nearly stole "Minority Report" from Tom Cruise), it has a pair of stars who are not as easily dismissed.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Far from a touchdown, but you gotta give points to any movie where a character describes its climactic game as a "muddy snoozefest."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
You could do worse for a date movie than Gurinder Chadha's campy, exuberant cross-cultural take on Austen's much-filmed 1812 novel.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A crowd-pleasing comedy that isn't going to win any awards for originality.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
"Love, Actually" meets "Trainspotting" in Intermission, an edgy Irish romantic comedy that deftly juggles a dozen interconnected story lines.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Not as elaborate or entertaining as Anderson's last feature, "Transsiberian," but it's got enough shocks for an entirely respectable addition to the post-apocalyptic genre.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 18, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Undercut by funereal pacing and an ending that seems more than a little contrived.- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Excellent performances redeem Jordan Melamed's gritty teenage version of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A valuable reminder that for nearly three decades, basketball was dominated by Jewish players - and coaches who found the sport an ideal vehicle for assimilation in the United States.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Giamatti tries very hard to put over Cold Souls -- some of his reaction shots are priceless -- but it's going to leave some people, well, cold.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Now that this technically impressive - but seriously flawed and self-referential - remake is finally in theaters to swell the July 4 weekend box office, conversation will doubtless shift to the lamest ending yet to a Steven Spielberg movie.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A flawed drama offering a rare look at the Catholic Church's canonization process.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Filming in gritty, black-and-white 16mm, Riker gets terrifically natural, often moving performances from his mostly non-professional cast.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
In monotonous narration, Rosette rants that the vendors' right to free speech should allow them to obstruct sidewalks, but the portrait of his subculture is so vaguely rendered, it will likely put audiences to sleep rather than change minds.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Gives a harrowingly accurate portrait of the indignities sometimes suffered by hospitalized patients - and the sacrifices their families make.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Maybe it's because I share Burton"s twisted affection for the 1970s, but for all its shortcomings, I'd sooner watch a sequel to Dark Shadows than another installment of the bloated "Pirates of the Caribbean" saga any day.- New York Post
- Posted May 11, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
For all of Linklater's acrobatic camera moves, you never quite escape the feeling you're watching a barely adapted TV version of a somewhat gimmicky stage play.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Expertly serves shivers, buckets of gore — and pretty much every cliché of the genre.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 2, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Does briefly sizzle in the scenes between Newton and French actress Christine Boisson, as the bisexual French police commander assigned to the case.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Don Cheadle gives one of the best performances of his career as jazz legend Miles Davis in Miles Ahead, even if his debut as a director ends up being an unfocused disappointment.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 31, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Despite a fierce lead performance by Naomi Watts, The Painted Veil is a quaintly bloodless, picture-postcard adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's 1925 China-set novel - more Merchant Ivory than David Lean.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Their often touching stories of how their lives - and livelihoods - were disrupted are effectively intercut with excerpts from press conferences in which Attorney General John Ashcroft.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It includes more than a few clever lines, and boasts a stellar cast, including the underutilized Diane Keaton.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 10, 2010
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Way too long, too convoluted and too peppered with title cards...Even so, it's hard to dislike Don Roos' "Magnolia"-inspired triptych of interconnected comic tales about lies, sex and video.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Though overlong, there are many stunning special effects, including a car chase up the side of a building, as well as the sort of wild animated subtitles that turned up in "Night Watch."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Features a riveting performance by Michael Shannon as oldest son Son. He's definitely an actor to watch.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A preposterous mix of sentiment and brutality that casts martial-arts star Jet Li as a music-loving killing machine, turns out to be his most entertaining movie in quite some time.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The film is extremely well-acted, and Berri is very good at demonstrating why the relationship is doomed.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
She’s (Fey) so good that — up to a point — you can ignore Paul Weitz’ erratic direction and a patchy script, both of which clumsily handle shifts between comedy and drama.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A lark for anyone who's willing to check their brains at the concession stand for 100 minutes.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
But while the belly laughs are few, there are numerous chuckles and it's quite watchable, thanks to solid performances by Damon (who plays it mostly straight in a rare comic role) and Kinnear.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Wildly uneven, but contains moments that are right up there with "The Player."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Safe in Hell doesn’t offer anything extraordinary in the way of skin or innuendo, but it’s chockablock with the kind of situations and characters that would be verboten on screen for nearly three decades commencing in mid-1934.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Two stars for adults -- 3 stars for kids. The under-5 set should take to The Country Bears like bears to honey - even if anyone much older will find this broad-as-a-barn-door Disney musical bear-ly tolerable.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Mena Suvari has her best role since "American Beauty" as Brandi, a self-centered nursing home employee distinctly lacking in sympathy for anyone.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
The Conjuring 2 belongs to Wilson and Farmiga as the sincere, loving, slightly square Warrens, with Wan tightening the screws for a rousing series of cliffhangers that should have audiences screaming. Expect another sequel for sure.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Stands in stark contrast to the quickie political documentaries that have flooded into specialty venues since last year.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Comes perilously close to being a vanity production for the obscure singer Isabel Rose, who stars and wrote the autobiographical screenplay with neophyte director Robert Cary, based on her own struggles as a cabaret singer.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Demonstrates that not only is sisterhood powerful, it can be awfully entertaining.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Sputnik Mania has a happy ending, thanks to German scientist Werner von Braun, who had been recruited for America after designing Nazi rockets that rained terror on England during World War II.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The clever screenplay, co-written by director Kelly Asbury (who co-helmed "Shrek 2"), follows the DreamWorks template of combining pop culture references, sight gags and action for the kids, and more sophisticated humor for adults.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 11, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Funny and frothy sex comedy from Spain with a very appealing cast -- and mediocre musical numbers.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Binder has allowed Allen, a brilliant actress, to go overboard with Terry's obnoxiousness, just as Brooks (his apparent role model) did with Téa Leoni in "Spanglish."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Clever, racially and sexually provocative variation on "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Though deadly serious, Christopher Smith's European-made bubonic- plague melodrama provides good value with lots of blood and guts, as well as a solid cast.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 11, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Very slowly builds to a powerful climax for this arty cross between "Straw Dogs" and "First Blood."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
You could make a worse choice for a late- summer popcorn movie than Takers, a Michael Mann-ish heist thriller with a pulse-pounding foot chase and some terrific stunt work offsetting its hackneyed plot and dialogue.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Depp's nonsense-spouting Mad Hatter, decked out in a red fright wig and possibly more makeup than Michael Jackson, is an unlikely resistance leader.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Cusack and Cage — who don’t have any scenes together until halfway through — do their best work in years, while erstwhile “High School Musical’’ star Hudgens shows off acting chops missing in “Spring Breakers.’’- New York Post
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Jonze seems to be heading for a far quirkier ending than the one he actually delivers, but he does tap into the zeitgeist with his unlikely romantic fable.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 17, 2013
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Justin Timberlake shows that he can do more as an actor than just take his shirt off - though he does that a lot as well - in the irresponsible, uncommercial but surprisingly watchable Alpha Dog.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Her star billing notwithstanding, Jolie has perhaps the ninth-largest part in the movie (behind seven humans and a dog), playing Cage's ex-girlfriend.- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Worth watching primarily for Blunt, the delicious scene-stealer from "The Devil Wears Prada."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Even after he manages to get out of the car and slowly starts recovering his memory, Wrecked keeps you guessing.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 1, 2011
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Posted Mar 11, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
If this overcooked version of James Ellroy’s novel - inspired by a famous 1947 Los Angeles murder - is less than fully satisfying or even believable storytelling and acting, it’s still possible to get a kick out of this fever dream loaded with eye candy.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The two lead actresses rise to the occasion when they're finally forced to confront each other at the climax.- New York Post
- Posted May 11, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
More fun than you'd expect from an adaptation of a '60s Hanna-Barbera cartoon that was in turn derived from a comic book.- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
The performances are more than serviceable and The Fluffer is well-paced and engaging until the flaccid climax.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Overlong, poorly paced and woodenly acted film.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Fortunately, Winters' legendary inventiveness as a comedian has not diminished with the years.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 11, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
There are also food scenes that will whet your appetite. But somehow a satisfying climax never makes it out of the oven.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Ron Shelton effectively ratchets up the tension without resorting to the stylistic flourishes of a more recent flick about dirty cops, "Narc."- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
An eccentric little comic thriller filled with enough laughs that I was mostly willing to overlook the fact that it makes virtually no sense as a thriller.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 29, 2010
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Refreshingly flirts with a very un-Disney political incorrectness.- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
It's an intriguing setup, filled with colorful characters, lots of humor and well-developed scenes.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Walking with the Enemy may not be another “Schindler’s List” (Ben Kingsley has a small but important role as Hungary’s deposed regent) but it’s handsomely photographed (A-list vet Dean Cundey) in Romania and a compelling addition to the Shoah canon.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 23, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Those who can hang on through the mumblecore-ish narrative languor of the nicely photographed The Exploding Girl will savor a very talented actress' sensitive portrait of youthful awkwardness.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Doesn't have nearly enough Hugh Grant and is a little short on laughs, but it gets by on Renée Zellweger's charms.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The performances are so solid - and newcomer Jon Dichter's direction (he also wrote the script) is so utterly assured - that the rather contrived ending barely seems to detract from the film's entertainment value.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The only character who makes much of an impression is a crazed, cannibalistic cockatoo voiced by Jemaine Clement ("Flight of the Conchords"), who gets the best of the handful of musical numbers.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 15, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Posey is a delight throughout, and Zoe Cassavetes is clearly a filmmaker to watch.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The movie is a visual feast, with Oscar-caliber sets and costumes that for many will justify the trip to the Paris Theatre.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
An Italian romantic comedy that's irresistibly set in Mole Antonelliana, the cavernous Museum of Cinema in Turin.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
If you go, be sure to stick around through the closing credits. By far the funniest part of the movie is a blackly humorous fantasy sequence starring Merchant.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 25, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
It's basically left to the viewer to figure out the historical significance of this drug-fueled odyssey.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 5, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Doesn't always deliver on its twists. But it works well enough that an American remake is in the works.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 15, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A sitcom with enough big laughs and emotional truth to get audiences past awkward pacing and some slow spots.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
This is a slickly entertaining package, beautifully photographed on well-chosen locations with an unerring sense of pace by Gregory Hoblit.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
How the feds inadvertently resurrected the performing career of stoner comic Tommy Chong by busting him is the ironic subtext of Josh Gilbert's one-sided documentary a/k/a Tommy Chong.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Visually, this toon is all over the place. Rapunzel's glowing hair can look alarmingly like fiber-optic cable, but some backgrounds are the computer-generated equivalents of Disney's golden-age work.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The ironically titled A Perfect Day isn’t entirely successful, but Del Toro is wonderful and there are many well-judged moments, some involving a 9-year-old (Eldar Residovic) whose return to his home underlines the tragedies of this particular conflict.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 20, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Michael Berry’s Frontera offers an unsparing look at the plight of illegal immigrants, even if the ending seems too patly convenient.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 3, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
A raunchy, often hilarious satire from the Judd Apatow stable that lacks any real bite.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 24, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Worth seeing for McTeer's touching, funny and richly detailed performance, which should put her on the map in Hollywood.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Surely, if Fey herself had written Baby Mama, this mild cross between "Baby Boom" and "The Odd Couple" would not be so crushingly predictable.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
An entertaining if nonsensical variation on Hill's greatest hit from that bygone era, "48 Hrs.''- New York Post
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Posted Nov 18, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Director Raymond de Felitta, who directed a little-seen gem called "Two Family House" a few years ago, gives Falk plenty of room to do his thing. There's an underlying emotional truth even in scenes that seem terribly contrived.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Pinto's lack of dramatic range (she basically has two expressions) and an awkward third act do not provide a solid foundation for Hardy's tragic ending.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
An overwrought, ramshackle weepie that really doesn't deserve Kline's Oscar-caliber work.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Adult World proceeds by fits and starts, but fans of Cusack won’t want to miss his performance as the petulant poet, whose resistance is inevitably worn down by his persistent fan.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 12, 2014
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
-
- Lou Lumenick
Captures some remarkably vivid present-day performances by the aging performers.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
The last half hour devoted to the Big Game, staged by a crew from NFL films, is genuinely rousing and inspiring. That's where Friday Night Lights finally shines.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Harrelson's charming flamboyance - seen to great effect in "No Country for Old Men" - is a great fit for Carter, who carries no small amount of self-loathing under his carefully coifed toupee.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- Lou Lumenick
Entertaining and heartwarming -- especially when Mirren sweeps into scenes with acid observations that fail to disguise a heart of gold.- New York Post
- Read full review
-
- New York Post
- Read full review