Lou Lumenick
Select another critic »For 2,489 reviews, this critic has graded:
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46% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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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:
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Positive: 1,242 out of 2489
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Mixed: 549 out of 2489
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Negative: 698 out of 2489
2489
movie
reviews
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Sarah Silverman: Jesus is Magic works best when this equal-opportunity offender is on the stage.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- 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
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
After a slightly promising start, this great-looking but ultimately deeply confusing and unscary sci-fi/horror opus turns into a quite boring rehash of M. Night Shyamalan's post-"Signs" films.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Sequels don't get much better - or smarter - than the action-, drama-, romance- and comedy-packed Spider-Man 2, which miraculously improves on the webslinger's hugely popular first screen adventure in every imaginable department.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
A truly baffling late entry in the "Pulp Fiction" sweepstakes that ends up drowning in its own pretensions -- along with, quite possibly, what's left of Val Kilmer's movie career.- New York Post
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- 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
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- Lou Lumenick
Quite possibly the first truly great fact-based movie of the 21st century.- New York Post
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- 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
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
So unremittingly awful that labeling it a dog probably constitutes cruelty to canines.- New York Post
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- 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
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Cisneros is an appealing actor, but he and Falling Awake get buried under a welter of clichés.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
A real head-scratcher that somehow won the grand jury prize at this year's Sundance Film Festival.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
This is a terminally whimsical vanity project that would probably have been a chore to sit through even in its original intended format, a 20-minute stage monologue.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Plays like an unwieldy mishmash of "Big Momma's House," "An Unmarried Woman" and "The Burning Bed," with lots of gospel music thrown in.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
This is a beautifully acted chamber piece --especially by the magnificent Blake, who is married to Norris in real life.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Price of Glory isn't an embarrassment on the order of the last major boxing movie, "Play It to the Bone," but it's not especially worth intercepting on its way to the video racks.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
The kind of thriller whose ridiculous climax hinges on a hitherto undisclosed GPS tracking device in a dog's collar - an appropriate touch in a movie that's more than a little flea-ridden itself.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
We now have the distance to see just how close to a flawless and utterly timeless a film Steven Spielberg and his collaborators crafted – one that transcended genres (sci-fi and kids’ movies) to become of one of the greatest and most durable of American movies. [2002 re-release]- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Theron is very good as a woman struggling for respect in a sexist environment. There are also small but telling performances by Susan Sarandon as Hank's worried wife, and Frances Fisher as a topless bartender who aids in the investigation.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Has enough heart and smarts to recommend it as one of the season's worthier family entertainments.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
I love musicals, but I'd be hard-pressed to recommend this curiosity, sort of a shoestring version of Francis Ford Coppola's "The Cotton Club."- New York Post
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- 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
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- 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
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- Lou Lumenick
One of those potentially interesting movies that takes its sweet time getting to the point - by which time many audience members will likely have bailed out or dozed off.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
A slickly entertaining war movie that's sometimes striking, sometimes silly -- but never, ever boring.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
You gotta give credit to any first-time direc tor who attempts an homage to classic screwball comedies on a shoestring budget, even if Kettle of Fish ends up not exactly being the catch of the week.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Vincent D'Onofrio does capture Hoffman's charisma and nuttiness - and he's the only reason to resist the temptation to skip this exasperating movie.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
You'll have to look elsewhere than this love letter to the Great White Way to explain why "Wicked" and "Avenue Q" became huge hits, and why "Caroline, or Change" joined "Taboo" as a costly flop.- New York Post
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- 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
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
If you insist on seeing Soul Men, stick around during the closing credits for the best part of the movie, an interview with Mac.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
One of the better political documentaries flooding into theaters after "Fahrenheit 9/11" and before the election.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Slick as a pig and reeking of phony sympathy for recession-wracked consumers, The Joneses is a black comedy about stealth marketing made by a filmmaker who's evidently much too close to the subject to bite the hand that feeds him.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Solid performances can't save Melissa Painter's pretentious teen drama Steal Me, which plays like a cross between "Dangerous Skin" (without the gay sex) and "Picnic" (without the production values or credible situations).- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
A lot more stupid action - and a lot less heart - than the character-driven original, as Stuart ends up rescuing Margalo from Falcon.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Boasts special effects that are really spectacular - too bad it lacks flesh-and-blood characters.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
The performances are solid, but as a screenwriter, Guttenberg can't make the situation seem like more than a theatrical construct in a contemporary setting.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
What might seem like showing off in another movie is dazzling storytelling here, packing in an hour's worth of human misery.- New York Post
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- 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
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- Lou Lumenick
Whatever message Brooks was trying to put across with Spanglish, it clearly got lost in translaaaaaaaaaaation.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
A collection of product plugs masquerading as a movie en route to home video.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
There are bachelor and bachelorette parties, as well as much misbehavior, in this glossy and unconvincing little flick, receiving a vanity booking on the way to video.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Co-star Christina Applegate, who's much more at home in this down and dirty milieu, wipes the floor (in one scene, literally, in a ludicrous cat fight) with the erstwhile Oscar winner.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Bursting with energy and originality even after 36 years, A Hard Day's Night is easily the best show in town.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
A low-rent, slow-witted horror flick notable chiefly for its hilariously unsuccessful attempt to pass off Luxembourg City as New York City.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
One of the 10 best American movies released so far this year, Kit Kittredge: An American Girl is the surprisingly satisfying first theatrical film inspired by a long-running series of historically themed dolls.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
A thoughtful, rousing and beautifully crafted epic.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Actually more entertaining than its 1994 predecessor.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
This rousingly sweet little flick is certainly nothing to go out of your way to avoid.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
It says a lot about the sequel that the funniest moment belongs to none of the big stars, but to Owen Wilson.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
2046 is a bit overlong and not for all tastes, but fans of "In the Mood for Love" will relish this second helping, which is more emotionally substantial than the first.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Ends up taking enough detours to keep DreamWorks' latest animated epic from striking cinematic gold.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- 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
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
The “Transformers” hottie undergoes her very own transformation here, thanks to satanic possession.- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
The first conservative documentary to join the bumper crop of liberal political films riding Michael Moore's coattails into theaters.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
A painfully sincere indie drama that isn't content to evoke only the misery of 9/11 -- it has to reference TWA Flight 800 for extra grief.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
Science fiction movies don't come much more ponderous than the beautifully filmed Never Let Me Go, which reduces the debate over genetic engineering to a mild, moist romantic soap opera.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- Lou Lumenick
A highly personal, provocative and in some ways riveting vision with an inspired performance by Jim Caviezel as Jesus.- New York Post
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