Sara Stewart
Select another critic »For 607 reviews, this critic has graded:
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48% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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50% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6.6 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Sara Stewart's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 59 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Dolemite Is My Name | |
| Lowest review score: | Would You Rather | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 324 out of 607
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Mixed: 176 out of 607
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Negative: 107 out of 607
607
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- New York Post
- Posted Feb 9, 2018
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- New York Post
- Posted Apr 14, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
Janet McTeer, Octavia Spencer, Diane Kruger and Jane Fonda brighten the screen momentarily, all in too-small roles.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 7, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
If you’re looking for a poverty-porn fix, Donnybrook ought to hit the spot. If not, you’ll likely find this a pointless exercise in gratuitous violence that imagines itself deep because it’s got an opera-heavy score.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 13, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
The cinematic equivalent of a paper plate with macaroni and glitter haphazardly glued onto it, Mother’s Day is a film only its creators could love (and even they must be having some misgivings).- New York Post
- Posted Apr 28, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
Parental Guidance kicks off with a mean-spirited joke about an overweight woman and heads downhill from there.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 26, 2012
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- Sara Stewart
This reverential documentary, crammed with insidery art-world anecdotes, seems unlikely to convince the average viewer why it was so important that several male artists ventured out of New York at that time to push dirt around with shovels and bulldozers.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 6, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
As might be obvious, I’m not a gamer, so perhaps all of this will be thrilling for fans who’ve played it. The rest of us, I imagine, may come out of this film invigorated with a creed of our own: Avoid movies based on video games.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
Even with a title this generic, there’s less to Murder Mystery than meets the eye.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 14, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
The considerable comic talents of Alison Brie (“Community”) are squandered by this exhaustingly quirky indie romance.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 16, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
So dull, the kids in my audience didn’t laugh until 45 minutes in — And that was at a coconut head-bonk, a gag so timeless it almost doesn’t count.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 8, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
A vague, syrupy soundtrack plays across scenes both current and past, making the whole thing feel like a bad soap opera.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 25, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
The dancing’s fine here, but there’s little else to distinguish Make Your Move, an entirely generic drama.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 16, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
Burying the Ex is missing the key ingredient every good zombie movie needs: brains.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 18, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
Director Anthony Leonardi, in his feature debut, litters the film with inconsistencies.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 3, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
I only laughed once, and it was when Whit Stillman made a cameo to be snubbed by the newly self-actualized Imogene. But it was mostly in disbelief; pretentious or not, Stillman represents a caliber of smart writing that’s wholly absent from Girl Most Likely.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
The innovation of Refn’s latest is mostly just in the way it manages to merge gory and boring. At least it’s created a new movie adjective for me: goring.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
If I wasn't already convinced of this movie's obnoxiousness, its rendering of Graham's character sealed the deal.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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- New York Post
- Posted Mar 11, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
The movie’s one saving grace — so to speak — is Raymond Cruz (Tuco from “Better Call Saul”) as a priest turned shaman. He, at least, injects a little wry humor into a film that otherwise bored me to tears.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 16, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
It’s a little less cute these days to watch his Jack Sparrow swish about drunkenly, knowing the actor’s an abusive lush. Equally wearisome is the spectacle of a once-entertaining franchise staggering around, devoid of purpose.- New York Post
- Posted May 24, 2017
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- Sara Stewart
As it stands, there’s little to explain the existence of this confoundingly unfunny film. It’s as if a talented cast (Wilson, Zach Galifianakis, Amy Poehler) assembled to make a comedy and at the last minute was told to play everything straight.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 20, 2014
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- New York Post
- Posted Jul 23, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
In reality, it’s a tiresome parade of gory and sexist cliches that are, frankly, insulting to a cast that includes Laurence Fishburne, Barry Pepper, Adam Goldberg, Leslie Bibb and Clifton Collins Jr.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 19, 2019
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- New York Post
- Posted Feb 20, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
This blathery, misogynist indie from first-time director David Grovic — which seems to be aiming for “Pulp Fiction” territory with its blend of crime, banter and the mysterious contents of a bag — falls far short, rife as it is with noir and gender clichés.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 26, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
There’s no better time than summer for a fun, brainless thriller. All you need is three key ingredients: a charismatic hero, a hateable villain and a snappy screenplay...Skyscraper, regrettably, cuts likable star Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson off at the knees by failing to deliver on the other two.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 10, 2018
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- Sara Stewart
The jovial, hyperverbal comic has played against type before, but his presence feels like epic miscasting in this underwritten dramedy.- New York Post
- Posted May 21, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
If you’re going to call your sci-fi movie Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets, you’d better be sure Valerian (Dane DeHaan) is a guy your audience can get behind. Director Luc Besson styles him as a cocky space rogue, but Valerian is weak sauce. And so is this movie.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 20, 2017
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- Sara Stewart
Is it never funny? No, it’s not never funny. It’s just not funny nearly often enough.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 17, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
It will probably not surprise you to learn that this film, generically directed by Christian Ditter (“Love, Rosie”), was written by the people behind 2009’s “He’s Just Not That Into You.” Seven years later, guess what? He’s still not that into you! And I wouldn’t be, either, not with this lot.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 11, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
Playing like a script that’s been moldering since Diane Keaton turned it down in 1983, The Other Woman is a weak adultery rom-com in which the most authentic performance comes from a non-housebroken Great Dane.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 23, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
Nothing in this movie would actually happen, so what’s irritating is that it presents itself as a savvy, “Am I right, ladies?” dating commentary.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
The awkwardly titled Unfreedom clearly waves the flag for acceptance and nonviolence — but it would be more effective if it invested as much in some cinematic nuance.- New York Post
- Posted May 27, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
At the start of Insidious 2, a young woman opens her mouth to speak and someone else’s voice comes out of her. Demonic possession? Nope, just some inexplicable dubbing to kick off this clunker of a horror sequel.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
This crowd-funded — and overcrowded — collection of interwoven stories, directed by John Herzfeld, plays like an amateur-acting exercise in which each participant picks a name and a couple of defining props.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 19, 2014
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- New York Post
- Posted Nov 19, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
There is virtually nothing in Mac Carter’s horror flick that deviates from the standard haunted house plot (or, in this case, plod).- New York Post
- Posted Mar 6, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
Like some hybrid beast out of Greek mythology, this young-adult sequel has the body of a “Harry Potter,” the head of a “Twilight,” the feet of a “Hunger Games” and the tail, oddly, of a “Raiders of the Lost Ark.”- New York Post
- Posted Aug 6, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
From its uninspired, sitcom-y look to its phoned-in dialogue (“I love you plus infinity”; “I love you plus double infinity”) to its creaky plot, Hit by Lightning is anything but electrifying.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 29, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
Seeing as Krampus is about the Alpine demon who punishes Christmas a-holes, this is a promising start — but alas, it’s all downhill from there, making a murky and humorless hash out of a pretty great piece of- New York Post
- Posted Dec 3, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
A clunky movie that feels as if it’s underwritten by the Roman Catholic Church.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 24, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
This incoherent screenplay seems to have been written by a roomful of the gorilla-like trolls who show up in the movie at one point.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 21, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
This overlong drama plays like a threefold infomercial: for Christianity, the cheesy resort chain Sandals and Jeff “Ja Rule” Atkins, the rapper-turned-actor playing drug kingpin Miles Montego.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
Domino, though, is the dregs: This thriller may be randomly set one year in the future, yet it’s hopelessly regressive — a parade of lame stereotypes that feels directed by an out-of-touch Old Hollywood old guy (De Palma is 78).- New York Post
- Posted Jun 1, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
There isn’t a moment of I’m Not Here that didn’t have me fervently wishing I wasn’t here.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 8, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
Ultimately, though, Saint Laurent is beautifully dressed with little substance, which doesn’t do much to subvert a prevailing stereotype about the industry as a whole.- New York Post
- Posted May 7, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
James Purefoy (“The Following”) makes a pretty decent bad guy. Olga Kurylenko (“The Water Diviner”) is passable as an action heroine. Neither of those facts makes Momentum any fun to sit through, crammed as it is with leaden dialogue and predictable plot turns.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 14, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
Yelchin is an immensely likable actor who does what he can, but his charm isn’t enough to save this awkwardly worded — and paced — wannabe thriller.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 27, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
Interspersed with the gore is banter between the leads, who fall into a predictable odd-couple pairing of fussy (Reynolds) and gonzo (Jackson). Their rapport is amusing, but entirely, clumsily incongruous with the thuggish mayhem all around them.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 17, 2017
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- Sara Stewart
This adaptation is so sloggy it feels like wading through thigh-deep snowfall, stained scarlet from all the gratuitous gore.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 19, 2017
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- Sara Stewart
The Wedding Ringer is not so much a rom-com as an anatomy lesson. And the lesson is this: Men have balls. They must have them, or grow them, otherwise they are not men. They are little girls.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 15, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
It makes so little sense on-screen that all you can do is nod along vaguely sympathetically at its sheer creative bravado.- New York Post
- Posted May 14, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
The whole endeavor seems like a bad idea badly executed, and one can only imagine that Simone, a fierce advocate of black pride and empowerment, would be aghast at this cheesy rendition of the later years of her life.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 21, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
It’s not great art (in fact, it’s pretty low-rent CGI), but it’s passably entertaining.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 2, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
There is a limit to the redemption Nicolas Cage can grant a terrible movie, and Primal is it.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 4, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
Minus its smirky twist ending, it’d make perfect material for New York’s new “That’s Abuse” domestic violence awareness campaign.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 13, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
There is no way you could make this movie stupider or more pointlessly noisy than it already is.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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- Sara Stewart
“Do you know how long it takes to peel the skin from a human body?” a torture-happy Russian goon asks in Red Sparrow. I imagine it feels about as long as sitting through this atrocious spy thriller.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 27, 2018
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- Sara Stewart
This ponderous drama from director Kazuaki Kiriya quickly gets weighed down by its own blood-drenched armor.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 1, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
Tarzan does little to adapt to modern times. Perhaps most punishingly of all for Skarsgard’s “True Blood” fans, it fails to ever put our hero in a skimpy loincloth.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 30, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
The movie lurches from one gross-out scene to another, flipping the bird at continuity and logic. It honestly seems as if Sandler and his team descended on a random suburb, halfheartedly improvising and moving on when they got bored.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
If Think Like a Man Too was a man, he would be the world’s worst date: humorless, shrill, speaking primarily in clichés (“what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas!”) and absolutely terrified of women.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 18, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
No amount of actorly dedication can change the pointlessness of watching unpleasant things happening to uniformly unpleasant people.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 12, 2014
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- New York Post
- Posted Jun 3, 2015
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- New York Post
- Posted Feb 25, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
Would you rather . . . watch this movie, or spend an hour and a half having your arm hairs plucked out with a rusty pair of tweezers? I’d have chosen the latter if it’d been on offer.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
This retrograde sex comedy is embarrassing for just about everyone involved, but I do think a special endurance shout-out should go to Reid Ewing (“Modern Family”).- New York Post
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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