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 6.5 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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- Sara Stewart
Tremblay is charming as an eccentric kid marching to his own tune, but the film’s attention wanders like a goat separated from its herd.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 20, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
The scrappy striver narrative may be an overly familiar one at this point, but director Tom Harper (the BBC’s “War & Peace”) gets a terrific performance from Buckley as Rose chases her dreams while living the kind of turbulent life that has always inspired the best of country songs.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 19, 2019
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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
Plus One is the latest evidence (see also: “Always Be My Maybe”) that the romantic comedy is making a long-awaited comeback, with some overdue modern tweaks.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 13, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
Even with a cast this lovable, The Dead Don’t Die falls short of the killer zom-com it could have been.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 13, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
It has no real reason to exist, other than to be a passable option for parents whose children are too young to handle PG-13 fare and feels like it.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 6, 2019
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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
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
Q Ball is a moving and dynamically shot portrait of the Northern California prison’s basketball team, which is sponsored by the NBA champion Golden State Warriors.- New York Post
- Posted May 25, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
Zoey Deutch is fine in a non-demanding role as the requisite starry-eyed female student, and Danny Huston (“Wonder Woman”) gives us a softer side as Richard’s weepy best friend. But this is, at its core, a one-man show, and given the uncertain future of Depp’s career (being axed from the “Pirates of the Caribbean” franchise, for example), it might also have been titled “Johnny Says Goodbye.”- New York Post
- Posted May 15, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
Hogg (“Exhibition”) sets The Souvenir in the 1980s but shoots her subjects with the long-armed reserve of a period piece; the ivory-complexioned Byrne bears a resemblance to 18th- and 19th-century European portraits glimpsed throughout.- New York Post
- Posted May 15, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
In a time when climate news is near-uniformly depressing, this is a nature documentary that pays loving and hopeful tribute to the complex web of life — and it won’t scare your kids.- New York Post
- Posted May 9, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
Poehler isn’t quite cynical enough to pull off a comedy in which, to paraphrase “Seinfeld,” there’s no hugging and learning, but Wine Country could have been improved by keeping its emotional scenes more in reserve — like a high-end cabernet.- New York Post
- Posted May 9, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
Would it have been tacky to visually play up the connection between Tolkien’s harrowing experiences on the WWI battlefield and his depiction of Mordor in the books? Perhaps. Beyond the briefest of allusions, Karukoski tastefully leaves that to the imagination. But this — like much of the film — is a tastefulness that induces sleepiness. Tolkien’s estate was not supportive of this film, understandably: The legendary author’s work is memorial enough.- New York Post
- Posted May 7, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
At stark odds with the director’s earlier work is the color palette of this one — that is to say, the film is nearly devoid of it, a haunting wash of multilayered grays. This is one Shadow that deserves to be in the spotlight.- New York Post
- Posted May 3, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
It’s blessed with an ace comic foil in Theron, who out-snarks Rogen in scene after scene. The duo makes a terrifically fun on-screen couple, with the kind of zingy banter (thanks to Dan Sterling and Liz Hannah’s screenplay) found in black-and-white movies pre-dating the term “rom-com.”- New York Post
- Posted May 2, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
At a certain point, the pattern of Knoop’s reticence, then acquiescence to Albert’s masquerade becomes slightly repetitive, but JT LeRoy still gives a compelling inside look at the head-scratching hoax that succeeded, in part, due to musty notions of what a hot shot writer ought to look like.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 25, 2019
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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
Elisabeth Moss is a primal, predatory force in Her Smell, a female-centric spin on the classic debauched rock star story.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 10, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
Ultimately Unicorn Store shows little appeal beyond, perhaps, a young-adult audience with a very high tolerance for glitter.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 5, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
As actor pairings go, you couldn’t hope for better than Oscar winner Sam Rockwell and nominee Taraji P. Henson. So why is The Best of Enemies such a slog?- New York Post
- Posted Apr 5, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
The film manages to be both hopeful and devastating — and recommended viewing for anyone who subscribes to the facile notion that abused women should “just leave.”- New York Post
- Posted Mar 29, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
Us is more expansive and messier, a Rorschach blot of a movie, riffing on primal fears and a raft of ’80s references. Is it a pointed cultural take or just a gleeful scare-fest? It depends on what you choose to take from it.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 21, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
It’s Schoenaerts, one of this generation’s finest actors, who makes The Mustang a moving look at human potential for redemption and rehabilitation.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 19, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
Salma Hayek, as their vengeful ex-boss Eva Torres, is fun to watch as she plots to outwit them time and again, but ultimately, there’s no one here to really care about.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 14, 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
Sebastián Lelio’s remake of his 2013 Chilean movie “Gloria” is, indeed, a glorious celebration of Julianne Moore at her peak.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 7, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
There are two things that make the flawed Mapplethorpe worth a watch: Matt Smith’s dedicated performance, and a reverent inclusion of so much of the artist’s work.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 1, 2019
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- Sara Stewart
There’s also a broader commentary here on the treatment of women, both in arranged marriage and in testosterone-heavy thrillers. Apte’s character stays largely an enigma throughout, but her palpable frustration with the men and culture around her — plus the chance to vicariously visit Goa, that jewel of an Indian seaside getaway — makes The Wedding Guest worth an RSVP.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 27, 2019
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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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