New York Post's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
For 8,354 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 44% higher than the average critic
  • 2% same as the average critic
  • 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: 100 Patriots Day
Lowest review score: 0 Zombie! vs. Mardi Gras
Score distribution:
8354 movie reviews
  1. The three-part anthology opens with its best shot, Hong Kong fruitcake Fruit Chan's "Dumplings," photographed by the great Christopher Doyle.
  2. The documentary traces the fiery history of Ballets Russes -- which for a time consisted of two warring companies.
  3. Basically a deadly dull rehash of "Resident Evil," which in turn was a third-generation clone of "Aliens."
  4. Thebest sports movies aren't really about sports. Dreamer has a few thundering horse races, but its finest moments are beautifully still ones, like the one in which a little girl peeks through a fence to give a lame filly a Popsicle.
  5. Like Truffaut's heaviest work, it's less interested in what brings people together than in what keeps them apart, and it achieves a painful truth you won't find in dating comedies.
  6. A trite, incoherent and pretentious bomb.
  7. One of the season's most delightful surprises.
  8. Exploring the lives of several wrongly convicted men exonerated by DNA evidence, the documentary After Innocence makes a reasonable case that compensation is due them.
  9. Bate is to be congratulated for reminding the world of Leopold's wickedness, even if he does OD on re-enactments.
  10. Ten percent of Ghana's 20 million people are disabled, yet the film makes little attempt to explain why.
  11. One of the oddest, most perplexing -- and delightful -- films to come along this year. And last year, too.
  12. The director, American-born Paula Fouce, has a passion for the holy ways of the East, and it shines through in Naked in Ashes.
  13. Would have benefited from a tighter focus. There are too many interviews with crazies - and Levin's failed attempt to get Jewish entertainers to discuss "The Passion of the Christ" should have ended up on the cutting room floor.
  14. Filmmaker Josh Stolberg claims to have been inspired by real-life events, but mostly he ineptly rips off other movies and wastes a cast that includes Rosanna Arquette, Adam Arkin and Elizabeth Perkins.
  15. Proceeds along familiar genre lines. But the denouement comes as a surprise, the five women are great screamers, and the cinematography and music add to the general feeling of menace.
  16. On paper, Ushpizin (Aramaic for "holy guests") looks like a hard sell. It works, however, thanks to a witty script and believable performances from real-life husband and wife.
  17. That rare documentary whose first half could have been written by Rosie O'Donnell, the second half by Pat Robertson.
  18. Among the year's ultraviolent pulp movies, "Sin City" was prettier and "The Devil's Rejects" more focused.
  19. Rambling, schmaltzy romantic comedy.
  20. I was held in suspense throughout The Fog, aching to learn the answer to its central riddle: Why would any one remake such a crummy movie?
  21. Terrific performances by Kevin Bacon and Colin Firth as a comic duo clearly modeled on Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin get swallowed up in Atom Egoyan's muddled murder mystery.
  22. A classic social drama in the proud tradition of "Norma Rae," "Silkwood" and "Erin Brockovich."
  23. Mandoki never passes up a chance to increase the schmaltz level, but that doesn't lessen the impact of this harrowing account of a hellish childhood.
  24. This movie takes its sweet time wrapping together three related tales set in various regions of North Carolina -- to ultimately devastating effect.
  25. Nine Lives hands the viewer a lot of work -- learning a whole new set of characters every few minutes -- for a disappointing wage. The bad stories waste your time, and the good ones leave you unsatisfied.
  26. An uninspired gay coming-of-age import from Germany.
  27. Take the real-life 1979 assassination of Park Chung-hee, the despotic, hedonistic, seal-testicle-loving president of South Korea, and stage it as if the Marx Brothers were running the country, and you might get The President's Last Bang.
  28. Excruciatingly bad.
  29. Includes insightful and often hilarious archival interviews with Langlois and dozens of associates, as well as wonderful footage of Langlois.
  30. Has a few too many coincidences and tends to be sugary, but it has an important precautionary message in this age of terror.

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