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 | |
|---|---|---|
| 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
In their refusal to be up-to-the-moment, the Narnia movies are bound to age beautifully, perhaps much more so than the two Shrek films Adamson directed.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
The film could have been improved if it had been less aggressively limp. But the post-adolescent, pre-adult moodiness is spot on: Everyone's favorite author is a bitter recluse, and the soundtrack heaves with the suicide sounds of Joy Division. Trier's intent is to reproduce a sweet, hazy vision of the agony of youth. Ever so elliptically, he succeeds.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
Zalla constructs a suspenseful movie with no intention of sugarcoating the daily hardships of New York's underclass.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
The dimly lit, exquisitely composed cinematography, by Guillermo Nieto, adds to the draw of this highly recommended movie.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Lou Lumenick
While this slow-starting update of "Private Lives" has plenty of laughs, the incredibly expressive (and too-seldom seen) Stevenson turns Julia's romantic dilemma into something genuinely moving. She makes A Previous Engagement something special.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
I'd call it a depressing soft-core porn flick, but that overstates its titillation factor. Mainly it's just icky.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
It's basically a Middle Eastern version of "The Princess Bride" with an assisted-suicide subplot.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
The movie has enough big-city wickedness and merry cruelty to keep things skittering unpredictably.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
Let the French stick to love stories and leave stupid comedies to Tinseltown.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
I have a feeling that this is the last time we'll see a down-and-dirty Ellen Page. Her handlers have too much wrapped up in her mainstream persona to ever again allow her to do anything as daring and out of the loop as The Tracey Fragments. And that's a shame.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
Turn the River lacks almost everything Eigeman has as a performer: charisma, wit and snappy delivery.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
Laughs are few and far between in the innuendo-laden script attributed to Dana Fox, who's also responsible for the reprehensible "The Wedding Date."- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
Pity that the direction and narrative lack passion. If there's anything a story of interracial adultery needs, it's passion.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
The film is an exposé only of a filmmaker's senseless contempt for the military.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Lou Lumenick
With such smarts and outstanding special effects, I eagerly await a second Iron Man movie, which of course is virtually promised in the final scene.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
It's something old, it's something new, it's something borrowed and it's something that blows.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
Occasionally there is a striking image or a moment of wounded sweetness, but mainly the film provides ample proof that it's possible to be bizarre and boring at the same time.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
This isn't Mamet at his finest, though, which leaves us with a script that is merely three times as smart as the average feature.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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Reviewed by
V.A. Musetto
Ines Efron and Martin Piroyanski give strong performances as Alex and Alvaro, respectively. Debuting director Lucia Puenzo, who co-scripted, tackles a dicey subject with sensitivity and taste.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
Surely, if Fey herself had written Baby Mama, this mild cross between "Baby Boom" and "The Odd Couple" would not be so crushingly predictable.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
Among the variations of gags from the original are a threesome involving Harold, Kumar and a giant bag of marijuana.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
Roman de Gare translates as "station novel," a book you might pick up to read on a train journey and then discard when you arrive at your destination. Lelouch's film is the cinematic equivalent, enjoyable fluff that your mind will discard after the closing credits - but worth seeing nevertheless.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
By the end, we wind up pretty much where we were four years ago when the pictures first appeared in the papers: Inexperienced troops did disgusting things, but it's a mystery who else knew.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
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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V.A. Musetto
By far the film's most interesting subject is the king's eldest daughter, 18-year-old Princess Sikhanyiso, who likes to be known as Pashu. She's a self-styled rapper who goes to a Catholic college in California and acts like the spoiled rich kid that she is.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
China's public image suffers another blow with Up the Yangtze, a documentary by Chinese-Canadian Yung Chang.- New York Post
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