New York Post's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 8,345 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 8.3 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: 4,335 out of 8345
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Mixed: 1,702 out of 8345
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Negative: 2,308 out of 8345
8345
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Lou Lumenick
Any way you slice it, A Tale of Two Pizzas is so ineptly written and directed that it's pretty soggy entertainment.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
A sweet comedy with a bright cast and few surprises, the film did well in China, where it was aimed at teenagers. Since Hilary Duff isn't in the cast, its success probably won't cross over to America.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
With its dry wit and all-star household, Baumbach's movie resembles Wes Anderson's "The Royal Tenenbaums" without the heavy whimsy.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Lou Lumenick
If animated dogs were eligible for acting awards, the Oscar would go to Gromit.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
Whether you're looking for a love story with a little gore or a horror movie with a little romance, Zombie Honeymoon will suit your taste.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
And how good should we feel about this match anyway? Absolutely anyone, we learn, can win the 1913 U.S. Open. Except blacks, Jews or women.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
There are far, far worse ways to spend two hours than watching Jessica Alba in a skimpy bikini - as well as other natural wonders photographed in the Bahamas - in the airheaded underwater adventure Into the Blue.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
If you can't be original, why not borrow from something no one has seen, like Ben Affleck's last five movies?- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
A cheesily amusing prequel to the 1993 film which starred Al Pacino as a Puerto Rican drug kingpin in Spanish Harlem, in one of his most entertaining performances. This time around, Jay Hernandez delivers a serviceable impression of a much younger version of Pacino.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
A remarkably assured feature debut by Bennett Miller, a longtime director of commercials (and the documentary "The Cruise") whose no-frills style trusts that the powerful material and the uniformly excellent performances need little embellishment.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
Comes as close as any film to explaining what the deal is with women and shopping.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
As in Allen's films, the extensive shooting -- mostly at locations in and around Central Park -- takes place in a whitebread world where the only person of color is Rosemary's nanny.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
Too strange and disjointed to attract much of an audience, but its astonishing visuals showcase a major new talent: first-time feature director and book illustrator Dave McKean.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
This maudlin, fact-inspired and anti-feminist dramedy is no "Far From Heaven" or "The Hours."- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
Chillingly realistic but deeply repellent, The War Within is a film that should not have been made.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
Okuda's debut behind the camera, Shoujyo, is a dirty old man's delight: schoolgirls galore in short skirts or, in Yoko's case, nothing at all. That may be enough for some viewers, but not for those who insist on a story that gives substance to its characters.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
A well-written and -acted drama that's also unrelentingly grim.- New York Post
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- New York Post
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- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
For most adults, and kids raised on "South Park," the painfully earnest story won't hold much interest. And the comedy is tame.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Lou Lumenick
Seriously flawed - and choppily edited in the worst Harvey Scissorhands style - but there are enough good moments to anticipate a second film from writer-director Katrina Holden Bronson, whose parents were Charles Bronson and Jill Ireland.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
A satirical blast at America's gun culture. But it's so entertaining that even a die-hard NRA member might be impressed.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
The rest of the cast is uniformly awful, including Carmen Electra and Kathy Griffin as a wacky medium who asks, "What do I look like? A comedian?" Not from where I'm sitting.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
Eschews the heavy sexual content (and most of the clichés) of so many gay films -- it also has a lot of heart.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
Solid entertainment value for the money, but those who think it's saying anything new or profound are kidding themselves.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Lou Lumenick
A painfully sincere indie drama that isn't content to evoke only the misery of 9/11 -- it has to reference TWA Flight 800 for extra grief.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
Adults will be more than passably entertained by this short, patriotic feature, and kids will be entranced.- New York Post
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Kyle Smith
Misleadingly billed as a Fallujah documentary, Occupation: Dreamland covers a six-week period when not much was happening there.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Kyle Smith
Dickens was a sentimentalist, but even his happy endings are more nuanced than Polanski's brutal anti-sentimentalism.- New York Post
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