New York Post's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 8,343 reviews, this publication has graded:
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44% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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54% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 8.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 57
| Highest review score: | Patriots Day | |
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| Lowest review score: | Zombie! vs. Mardi Gras |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 4,334 out of 8343
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Mixed: 1,701 out of 8343
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Negative: 2,308 out of 8343
8343
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
The Concert is an art-house trap, the cinematic equivalent of one of those salads that turns out to have more calories than a Big Mac. And for the same reason: gobs of thick, sweet dressing.- New York Post
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- Critic Score
With action aplenty, talking animals and enough gags to make any sane grown-up groan, "The Revenge of Kitty Galore" is a harmless but fun hot-weather diversion for the family.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
V.A. Musetto
Fails as a detective story, but it does offer an entertaining look at the punk scene in the 1970s.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
Darlings, there's nothing quite so tragique as a boring eccentric.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
It's condescending, it's vague, it's unfair and, ultimately, it's pointless.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Lou Lumenick
Duvall and Spacek are so in tune with each other's rhythms -- despite their 20-year age difference -- that it's hard to believe they've never acted together before.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
Salt contains many conflicts: intelligence vs. counterintelligence, blond Angelina vs raven-haired and . . . well, that's about it.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Lou Lumenick
Newcomer Joey King is funny and adorable as daydreaming 9-year-old Ramona Quimby.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
Illustrating the many ways nuclear weapons could kill you makes Countdown to Zero one of the most frightening documentaries you'll ever see, or endure.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Lou Lumenick
While it obviously isn't for all tastes, this is a big, thematically rich step forward -- mostly it's about tolerance and forgiveness -- from the empty provocation of Solondz's "Storytelling" and "Palindromes." About time.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
Carion gets excellent performances from Emir Kusturica as the Russian and Guillaume Canet as the Frenchman. Each is a filmmaker in his own right -- Canet's directorial résumé includes the thriller "Tell No One" and Kusturica's lists the Serbian black comedies "Underground" and "Black Cat, White Cat."- New York Post
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Reviewed by
V.A. Musetto
Talking heads include friends, fellow artists, art dealers and former girlfriends. One contributor is Julian Schnabel, the painter and filmmaker who directed the 1996 biopic "Basquiat."- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Lou Lumenick
Nolan blurs the distinction between dreams and reality so artfully that Inception may well be a masterpiece masquerading as a summer blockbuster.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
V.A. Musetto
In an effective touch, Kisses opens in black and white, changes into color for its Dublin scenes, then returns to monochrome.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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Reviewed by
V.A. Musetto
The plot of the gorgeous Mexican film Alamar -- a father-son vacation -- isn't what Hollywood calls "high concept." But thanks to director-cinematographer-editor Pedro Gonzalez-Rubio, the film might be called "high enjoyment."- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
A two-hour trailer: explosion, shape-shift, chase, wisecrack, repeat. Its most amazing trick will be how it vanishes from your memory before the seat you vacate has stopped moving.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
Though Despicable Me is a little ragged on story, it's got a lot of imagination and a heart as warm as a fluffy kitty.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
After 23 years and three attempts, Predators finally delivers a solid sequel to the Arnold Schwarzenegger B-movie classic.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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Reviewed by
V.A. Musetto
If you want an introduction to the director's work, you're better off with "La Belle Noiseuse" (1991) and his masterpiece, "Celine and Julie Go Boating" (1974).- New York Post
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- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
Almost without exception, the men are either sickening deviants or wise mentors while the ladies tend to be kickboxing hipsters or victims of sexual abuse (many are both).- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
Apprently novice filmmaker Angela Ismailos' definition of a Great Director is one who's willing to sit or walk with her while she lobs innocuous questions and gives herself lots of awed close-up reaction shots.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
Finzi's lovingly filmed movie draws viewers into the lives of its two young heroes. You don't have to be a ballet buff to be moved by Isabela's and Irlan's stories.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
If M. Night Shyamalan sold his soul to the devil for the success of "The Sixth Sense," I think His Satanic Majesty has finally collected in full with The Last Airbender.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
Dispenses with much of the caramel gooeyness of the first two episodes in favor of decent action, some heartfelt tender moments and even a splash of wit. This time they’re actually Twi-ing.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
V.A. Musetto
The film casts Spector in a sympathetic light. You can't help feeling sorry for the tormented genius.- New York Post
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