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
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- Sara Stewart
The dialogue is so vague, and the plot so minimal, it all feels like a rather pointless exercise.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 30, 2014
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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
This flaccid comedy tries to spark your interest by undressing two of its four stars down to their underwear for significant periods of time. More outrageously, neither of those people is Jon Hamm.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 20, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
Aloft is less like a story than a dream, populated with gorgeous people and symbolism you can interpret any way you like.- New York Post
- Posted May 20, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
It’s well-executed but familiar territory, with a dearth of jarring moments. Those of us who aren’t friends and family of the crew could use a little wake-up shove here and there.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 10, 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
My All American would have done better to dig deeper in its portrayal of a man who set such a high bar for the intrinsic character of a football player. Because he’s actually the kind of example the sport could really use right now.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 13, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
The plot swerves around just enough to make you think something more complex is going on. Ultimately, it really isn’t — certainly not enough to make up for the clichés and sexist tropes that litter Lucas’ path toward a confrontation with the bad guys.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 15, 2018
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- Sara Stewart
You'd hope a political-insider indie reuniting "West Wing" stars Rob Lowe and Richard Schiff, and informed by the experiences of an actual former spin doctor, would be a small delight. You would be wrong.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 24, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
Adapting the author’s cornball formula for a second time around is once-ambitious director Lasse Hallström (“Dear John”), who delivers a cinematic valentine you’ll be reasonably content to watch on a flight in a year or so.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Jul 21, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
Alas, the film’s relevance — and ultimately sane upshot — is buried beneath a meandering and oftimplausible plot.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
For parents of very young children looking for a weekend distraction, “Color City” is passable fare — and will at least inspire kiddies to finish what they start, coloring-wise.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 1, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
Director Peter Chelsom (“Hannah Montana: The Movie”) and screenwriter Allan Loeb (“Collateral Beauty”) squander countless opportunities to make this fish-out-of-water story intellectually curious or even much fun.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 13, 2017
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- Sara Stewart
A horror movie with an anti-globalist bent that’s more interesting than its halfhearted scares.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 25, 2015
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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
Thankfully, director Miguel Arteta (“Beatriz at Dinner”) gets a solid half-hour of funny out of this thing before clunkiness sets in.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 8, 2020
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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
This erotic noir is about as substantial as one of its female lead’s string bikinis, but it’s an enjoyable trifle nonetheless.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
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- Sara Stewart
Overall, the insubstantial Lucky Stiff feels like community theater with an extravagant budget.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 23, 2015
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- New York Post
- Posted Apr 8, 2015
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- New York Post
- Posted Sep 2, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
Heavy on quirk and light on wit, first-time director Gillian Greene’s comedy leans too heavily on the badly wigged Kranz.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 3, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
As an exploration of post-traumatic stress disorder in US war veterans, the psychological thriller Jacob’s Ladder was ripe for an update. As a piece of enjoyable ’90s shock schlock, it maybe should have just stayed where it was.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 21, 2019
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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
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
Witherspoon’s charge, Sofía Vergara as a recalcitrant witness in need of police protection, is an adept slapstick comic likewise hamstrung by director Anne Fletcher’s sluggish pacing, which reliably stays with a scene for three beats beyond the punch line.- New York Post
- Posted May 7, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
Yes, there are the requisite jump-in-your-seat scares, many of them false alarms, and it all plays out basically exactly like any other horror movie, but Lawrence does elevate the proceedings.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 21, 2012
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- Sara Stewart
Teen house-arrest thriller Dark Summer gets out ahead of any ripping-off-“Disturbia” talk with an early Shia LaBeouf joke. But its sleepy, hallucinogenic aesthetic is an entirely different — and rather less engaging — style, anyway.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 7, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
Aside from these curious role reversals, though, Alex Cross is a mess. Drawing on every conceivable '80s B-movie action cliché and treating its beleaguered female characters like pieces of meat (literally, in one scene of butchery), director Rob Cohen squanders a surprisingly recognizable cast on a half-baked plot adapted from James Patterson's series of novels.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 19, 2012
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- Sara Stewart
“Gatsby” meets “Gossip Girl” in this outsider-among-the-wealthy story set, like Fitzgerald’s novel, on Long Island.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 9, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
Leong’s film isn’t particularly stylish, but it makes the most of the climactic Knicks footage, as well as showcasing a sweetly goofy side of the 25-year-old, now playing for the Houston Rockets.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 3, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
Shooting in South Africa and Botswana, director Kamaleshwar Mukherjee never lacks for atmosphere, but his film is painfully awkward in execution, from the stiff dialogue to the time-padding slo-mo sequences and glaring CGI.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
Most damning of all, the dark mystery hinted at throughout is revealed so lazily it lands with zero impact. It’s long been clear that Cage has opted for quantity in his movie roles, but maybe a little quality control wouldn’t hurt.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 5, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
At the risk of sounding 100, I think it’s regrettable this film had to be shot in digital 3-D. Both those formats actually do a frustrating disservice to the depiction of the action, making them look choppier, more flickery and occasionally blurrier than they would otherwise.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2013
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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
Like the artificially sweetened junk food it is, this all goes down pretty easily.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 16, 2014
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- New York Post
- Posted Sep 20, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
Director Christian Charles gets some comic mileage from the inimitable Walsh and Rae, but it’s ultimately hard to care too much about a caddish protagonist like Norman — or, for that matter, about the clichéd “women are crazy!” sentiment that hums nastily under the antics of Dori’s unorthodox family gathering.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 18, 2013
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- Sara Stewart
There’s little sense of urgency, or — oddly, given the film’s title — of scale. You never really think that the 47 are truly outnumbered, and the large action scenes are often just incomprehensible.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 24, 2013
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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
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
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
More perplexing than any of the supposed mysteries of Terminal is what Mike Myers, of all people, is doing here, playing a train-station janitor with a creepy “Danny Boy” whistle.- New York Post
- Posted May 10, 2018
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- Sara Stewart
Heck, between this and “Cats,” maybe Universal is now just specializing in confounding talking-animal movies. At least this one leaves you feeling kindly toward other species, rather than freaked out by them.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 15, 2020
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- Sara Stewart
The Poison Rose doesn’t aspire to transcend any clichés, and judging from the flagging energy level of the actors, everyone involved knows it.- New York Post
- Posted May 27, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
There’s a secret at play in After, which director Pieter Gaspersz communicates via many side-long glances. I won’t give it away, but it’s a fairly far-fetched twist that feels out of place in this realism-based drama.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 6, 2014
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- Sara Stewart
Director Mark L. Mann seems to be searching for the meaning in aimlessness, and in lowered expectations. But too often the narrative left me feeling the titular “um.”- New York Post
- Posted May 2, 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
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
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
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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- New York Post
- Posted Mar 11, 2015
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- New York Post
- Posted Feb 20, 2014
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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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- 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 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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- 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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- New York Post
- Posted Jul 23, 2014
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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
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
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
This female revenge thriller starts out promisingly, but squanders its girl-power capital quicker than you can say "Rihanna."- New York Post
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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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
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
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
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
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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- New York Post
- Posted Jun 3, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
Only in his early 20s, Zephyr Benson makes a remarkably assured debut as writer, director and star of Straight Outta Tompkins, his tongue-in-cheek title for his past as a middle-class drug dealer in lower Manhattan.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 4, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
Whether you dig this aggressively campy horror-comedy is, to some extent, dependent on your squeamishness.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 2, 2015
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- Sara Stewart
Those People also suffers, perhaps, from a lack of timing; Kuhn’s group of one-percenter millennials harkens back to early Whit Stillman or, more recently, “Gossip Girl.”- New York Post
- Posted May 5, 2016
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