The New Yorker's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 3,481 reviews, this publication has graded:
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37% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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61% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 66
| Highest review score: | Fiume o morte! | |
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| Lowest review score: | Bio-Dome |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,939 out of 3481
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Mixed: 1,344 out of 3481
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Negative: 198 out of 3481
3481
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Anthony Lane
Despite the déjà vu, there is plenty to savor in Miller’s film, and the final third, in particular, is quite the light show.- The New Yorker
- Posted Nov 4, 2019
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Richard Brody
American Dharma succeeds neither as journalism nor as portraiture, neither as political critique nor as cultural survey nor as psychological study.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 31, 2019
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Reviewed by
Anthony Lane
If I had to define The Irishman, I would say that it’s basically “Wild Strawberries” with handguns. Like Bergman’s film, from 1957, this one is structured around a road trip.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 28, 2019
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Richard Brody
Lapid’s sense of form is more modest than his impulses; his direction falls short of Mercier’s clenched intensity and unhinged energy.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 24, 2019
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Reviewed by
Anthony Lane
It’s no surprise that the film should so often stumble and trip, yet I would sooner watch it again and sort through my mixed feelings about it than revisit, say, the nullity of “Joker.” There is genuine zest in the unease of Jojo Rabbit, and it’s weirdly convincing as a portrait of childhood under surreal strain.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 21, 2019
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Reviewed by
Anthony Lane
Dafoe and Pattinson have the stage pretty much to themselves, and the result is a beguiling crunch of styles.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 21, 2019
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Anthony Lane
Gemini Man is largely a sad affair. Fans of double characters should stick with Austin Powers, who, in “The Spy Who Shagged Me” (1999), enjoys the rare privilege of meeting the person he was ten minutes ago. “You,” he says, “are adorable.”- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 14, 2019
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Reviewed by
Anthony Lane
Bong, in short, is a merchant of stealth. There is no more frenzy in the editing of Parasite than there are shudders in the motion of the camera, and, as with Hitchcock, such feline prowling toys with us and claws us into complicity with deeds that we might otherwise fear or scorn.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 14, 2019
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Anthony Lane
The unholy clash of pageantry and squalor is finely framed; warriors in silvery helmets, shot from high above, and gleaming in the murk, resemble a nest of wood lice.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 7, 2019
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Anthony Lane
Such is the strenuous effort of Phoenix’s performance that it becomes exhausting to behold.- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 30, 2019
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Pauline Kael
The film, directed by Perry Henzell, is feverish and haphazard, but the music redeems much of it, and the rhythmic swing of the Jamaican speech is hypnotic.- The New Yorker
Posted Oct 3, 2019 -
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Reviewed by
Richard Brody
Zellweger’s singing here passes through to the other side. Suddenly, Zellweger herself seems to pass over to the other side of the character, to come out from behind the curtain and reveal that the cabaret performer and singer in question isn’t Judy Garland but Renée Zellweger, and has been all along. She leaves the movie behind, where it belongs, and heads off on her own, by herself.- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 26, 2019
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Reviewed by
Anthony Lane
Downton Abbey concludes with both Lady Edith and Daisy uttering the sacred words “I’m happy.” Upstairs and downstairs, in perfect concord: believe that, and you’ll believe anything.- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 23, 2019
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Anthony Lane
How can a parable that set out to take the side of little people, versus gargantuan greed, end up using them as disposable comic fodder?- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 23, 2019
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Anthony Lane
Ad Astra is Gray’s most formidable paradox to date, liable to leave you awed, confused, and sad. It is a work of calculated grandeur, and, if you get the chance to catch it in IMAX, and thus to revel in the breadth of its beauty, do so. But there’s something small at the movie’s core.- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 16, 2019
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Richard Brody
As written and directed by Lorene Scafaria, the movie offers enough moments of sharp emotion and keen perception to keep anticipation high throughout. Yet the movie stays on the surface, to yield, for the most part, a simplistic, unexplored celebration of characters who are molded to fit the story’s amiable tone.- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 19, 2019
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Anthony Lane
What Landes has done is to revise, and to render yet starker, the premise of “Lord of the Flies.”- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 16, 2019
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Anthony Lane
At once breakneck and tolerant, Give Me Liberty manages to be both rousingly Russian and touchingly all-American. The Cold War is officially over.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 26, 2019
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Anthony Lane
This mixture of poverty and fantasy will not be for everyone. Compare the angry reaction to Buñuel’s “Los Olvidados,” when it came out, in 1950; not content with revealing the plight of destitute children, in Mexico City, Buñuel had the temerity to swerve into nightmare.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 26, 2019
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Reviewed by
Richard Brody
It’s built on such a void of insight and experience, such a void of character and relationships, that even the first level of the house of narrative cards can’t stand.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 22, 2019
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Richard Brody
The filmmakers’ probing analysis reveals the basic principles of freedom and dignity within the political essence of labor issues.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 19, 2019
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Anthony Lane
Good Boys is worth catching for those rare and wrenching points at which emotional honesty breaks through.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 17, 2019
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Reviewed by
Anthony Lane
Where’d You Go, Bernadette has to be seen, and demands to be believed, because of Cate Blanchett. Like “Blue Jasmine” (2013), which earned her a second Oscar, this new film lies at her command.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 17, 2019
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Richard Brody
The new comedic drama Blinded by the Light feels designed to be heartwarming, and does a depressingly good job of defining by example that innocuous quality- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 15, 2019
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Reviewed by
Richard Brody
Its big idea, though vague, is at least a fascinating curiosity. But with its jumble of clichés, its blatant word-bubble declarations, and its hectically rushed impracticalities, the movie—which is based on a comic-book series—invites an air of antic exaggeration and revved-up stylization. It hints frustratingly, throughout, at a comedic impulse that the direction of its actors suppresses.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 13, 2019
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Anthony Lane
For novices, the film will serve as a lively, if annoying, introduction to the Hammarskjöld mystery, yet there’s a sadness here. The more we are encouraged to puzzle over the darkness of his death, the less heed will be paid to his illuminating life.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 12, 2019
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Anthony Lane
The longer that After the Wedding goes on, the more it concentrates on the woes of white folk, to the exclusion of all else, and you gradually realize that the Third World, far from being a source of cultural tension, isn’t even a backdrop to minor domestic events on the East Coast.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 12, 2019
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Richard Brody
This boldly confrontational and journalistically probing documentary, by the director Nanfu Wang, goes beyond the slogan of China’s longtime “one-child policy” to reveal the system of violence, corruption, propaganda, and silence on which it depended.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 8, 2019
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Anthony Lane
Cars and songs. To be exact: the sight of a car bowling along, at speed, while a song cries out on the soundtrack. That, in the end, is what Quentin Tarantino loves more than anything; more than crappy old TV shows, more than boxes of cereal, more than violence so rabid that it practically foams, and more, if you can believe it,than the joys of logorrhea. His latest work, Once Upon a Time . . . in Hollywood, is a declaration of that love.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jul 29, 2019
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Anthony Lane
The movie simmers with a longing for revenge, frequently boiling over, and the foe is not just Hawkins but the colonialist order for which he stands: barbarism, thinly disguised as civilization. Many scenes feel punishingly hard to watch.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jul 30, 2019
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