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. Bardem gives such a brilliant performance in The Sea Inside, it's a crime that the film itself drowns in tears.
  2. If you think you've seen Imaginary Heroes before, you're right -- only it was called "The Ice Storm," or maybe "Ordinary People."
  3. A spare, exquisitely realized masterpiece about faith, redemption and boxing that beautifully illustrates his longtime philosophy that "less is more."
  4. Who says you need a big crew and tons of money to make an enjoyable movie?
  5. Forget the plot of Ocean's Twelve - you will by the time you leave the theater, if not sooner. This slickly entertaining sequel is all about savoring eye candy.
  6. Intermittently brilliant, intermittently hilarious -- and occasionally tedious.
  7. Lush and poetic, Dolls proves once again that Kitano is one of the world's most original filmmakers.
  8. Moves along its tranquil way until about five minutes before the closing credits, when it turns into a terrorist thriller.
  9. An old-fashioned soaper that will please or not, depending on a viewer's tolerance for schmaltz.
  10. Sucky vampire flick.
  11. Briski, a New York photographer, spent several years with the pre-teens. But she did more than just film them -- she tried to help them.
  12. An impeccably acted and directed - but quite icy - portrait of deception and betrayal.
  13. The movie equivalent of a 12-course feast crammed with unforgettable images and mind-boggling stunts.
  14. An Italian romantic comedy that's irresistibly set in Mole Antonelliana, the cavernous Museum of Cinema in Turin.
  15. Touches on issues raised in "Bad Education," but without Pedro Almodovar's flamboyant elegance.
  16. The sweet script, crisp direction and a delightful performance by Leila Hatami, as the sad-eyed wife, should put Deserted Station on your must-see list.
  17. Fairly suspenseful.
  18. A flawed black comedy about two buddies who open a butcher's shop in a small Danish town.
  19. Inventive and bold, Jesus, You Know will especially resonate with people, like this critic, whose strict Catholic upbringing (some might call it brainwashing) inalterably shaped their lives.
  20. No "Schindler's List," to put it mildly.
  21. A clever and stylish Dutch twist on the old good-twin/bad-twin plot.
  22. It's an odd, initially jarring mixture of style and subject matter that works better as the film goes along.
  23. Will go down in history as the movie that showed a turtle getting an enema. It also features a hot performance by Marguerite Moreau.
  24. An insightful time capsule.
  25. Director Lou Ye, who gave us the lilting "Suzhou River," doesn't care much for dialogue. He lets Wang Yu's pulsating camerawork do the talking.
  26. The game cast tries desperately to be funny, but Day hasn't provided them with the material.
  27. As huge a travesty and a bore as 1956's "Alexander the Great," in which Richard Burton looked equally uncomfortable as a blond.
  28. A loud, coarse and witless family comedy.
  29. It's a long way from the carefree days of "Breathless" and "Band of Outsiders," but then the world has changed since Godard made those movies 40 years ago.
  30. Director-writer Roger Stigliano used a tiny budget to fashion an endearing screwball comedy that brings to mind Jonathan Demme's "Something Wild" (1986).

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