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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- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Jonathan Foreman
It's a lumpy and disorganized film that remains unsatisfying, perhaps because the fundamental oddness of having sex in public for money as a way of life remains just as mysterious at the end of the film as in the beginning.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
Martin's most adventurous film in many years, may be next best thing to a quick shot of nitrous oxide.- New York Post
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Jonathan Foreman
The result is a remarkably beguiling documentary, on a number of levels.- New York Post
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Jonathan Foreman
One of those exercises in romantic whimsy that misses its mark: It's alternately sappy and uncomfortably harsh.- New York Post
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Jonathan Foreman
As entertaining as it is amazingly faithful.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
The performances are more than serviceable and The Fluffer is well-paced and engaging until the flaccid climax.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
V.A. Musetto
Judging by this passionate film, the medical community -- has no clue about what causes this awful malady and, worse, doesn't seem to care.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
Morrow fares less well with the script, which he also produced and collaborated on.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
Black, who all but stole "High Fidelity," is disappointingly bland and one-note in his first starring role.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
A muscular, endlessly twisty homage to film noir capers like "The Asphalt Jungle."- New York Post
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Jonathan Foreman
Unfortunately, the mind and motivation of Otomo -- remain a mystery.- New York Post
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Jonathan Foreman
Overall, this sci-fi/martial arts hybrid has the stale aura of a product assembled out of bits of other action movies.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
Unfortunately, director Marc Foster (who co-wrote the screenplay) never allows anyone except Mitchell to play more than a one-dimensional character.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
That is not an original idea, for sure. But the ensemble cast -- especially Tatou as a 24-year-old store clerk named Irene -- is personable and the Parisian ambiance is catching.- New York Post
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Reviewed by
Lou Lumenick
Smart, funny and ingeniously detailed with terrific vocal teamwork.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
A slick, sweet, fast-paced, feel-good romantic fantasy that's fairly irresistible if you can keep your cynicism in check for a couple of hours.- New York Post
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Jonathan Foreman
Laughs are few and far between, and the film feels brutally long.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
For all of Linklater's acrobatic camera moves, you never quite escape the feeling you're watching a barely adapted TV version of a somewhat gimmicky stage play.- New York Post
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Jonathan Foreman
Despite its visual brilliance, its all-round cleverness, and the way it demonstrates a profound understanding of genre, the Coen brothers' The Man Who Wasn't There doesn't quite come off.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
The biggest load of New Agey hogwash to grace the big screen since Spacey's "Pay it Forward."- New York Post
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Jonathan Foreman
A strange Gallic imitation of a Woody Allen comedy, replete with a neurotic older hero.- New York Post
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Jonathan Foreman
The result is an intermittently instructive and amusing jumble that might have been seen as daring and "transgressive" in both form and content if it had been released, say, three decades ago.- New York Post
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Lou Lumenick
Rambles on for nearly two hours with subplots that go nowhere -- and half-baked leftist political commentary -- before focusing in for a quietly devastating climax.- New York Post
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V.A. Musetto
Light on dialogue and heavy on creepy atmosphere. See this movie and a visit to the tailor's will never be the same.- New York Post
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