The New York Times' Scores

For 20,313 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 46% higher than the average critic
  • 5% same as the average critic
  • 49% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 4.2 points lower than other critics. (0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 61
Highest review score: 100 Short Cuts
Lowest review score: 0 Gummo
Score distribution:
20313 movie reviews
  1. Bluntly downbeat.
  2. What distinguishes The Low Down from movies like "The Brothers McMullen" and "My Life's in Turnaround" is its ragged edge of authenticity, its refusal to plot its characters' lives on the graph of romantic comedy convention.
  3. Emerges as an uncommonly sober, well-researched film of its type.
  4. Nostalgia and comedy are run through a food processor until they become a flavorless paste.
  5. A strange and funny film, smart, complex and difficult to shake.
  6. The movie's comic heart consists of a series of indescribably loopy, elaborately conceived happenings that are at once rigorous and chaotic, idiotic and brilliant.
  7. In a culture apparently defined by lap dancing, ersatz architectural sublimity and the virtual contact of cyberspace, how do we know what is real? The Center of the World, for example, is as phony as can be.
  8. In the end, Lisa's revolt seems as predictably programmatic, and as widely abstracted from observable human behavior, as the movie that contains her.
  9. Brigham City, like "God's Army," may proselytize for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but Brigham City is also an example of concise, skillful filmmaking.
  10. Mr. Mantegna, who as an actor is one of the leading interpreters of Mr. Mamet's work, gives generous room to the movie's first-rate ensemble.
  11. If the film were a fight, they'd have stopped it.
  12. The political implications of the film are manifest, as is the quiet courage of making it.
  13. Ms. Zellweger accomplishes the small miracle of making Bridget both entirely endearing and utterly real.
  14. Few people other than future airline passengers should be subjected to such misery.
  15. You are left with the feeling that its excesses notwithstanding, it knows its chosen terrain.
  16. Mr. Bana's Chopper is so scarily convincing that he makes you feel the eruptive force of each mood swing and the way his character's paranoia, egomania and conscience- stricken apologies are part of a volatile emotional cycle.
  17. Relentlessly softheaded and softhearted.
  18. Has the dreary one-track banality of a feature-length version of an episode of "Red Shoe Diaries," Showtime's series for people who like soft core but are too lazy to leave the house.
  19. Over all, the humor has been sanitized a bit compared with the darker, more grotesque comedy of the French original.
  20. Beneath its studiedly ugly surface, this bargain-basement answer to "Thelma and Louise" is as loathsome as any mindless, blood-drenched Hollywood action-adventure yarn.
  21. What appears on the screen has a starkness that is almost indelible.
  22. Overplotted, hollow thriller.
  23. All about bright colors and constant movement.
  24. Gentle and easy to take.
  25. Perhaps it's the difference in culture, but the thoughtfulness in Smell of Camphor, Fragrance of Jasmine shows that its creator isn't letting himself or his audience off the hook.
  26. Depp's witty, spare performance gives the picture a poignancy -- a depth of feeling, if you'll allow the pun -- that Mr. Demme's hectic direction and the hurried script by David McKenna and Nick Cassavetes don't quite earn.
  27. The fun is contagious.
  28. So good it leaves you starved for more.
  29. Amateurish and incoherent.
  30. A film in which nothing is what it seems, this is the kind of genre touch that Mr. González Iñárritu expands into something far more haunting.

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