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
Although Sollima’s film is unbothered, for the most part, by the plight of refugees, it gets one thing dismayingly right: our most significant witness, on the fault line where Mexico and America grate against each other, is a child.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jul 2, 2018
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Richard Brody
Reed, a comedic wizard, generates some moments of giddy wonder, but the earlier film’s freewheeling, low-key loopiness is replaced by a dull and dutiful plot that, with its forced references to other Marvel installments, squeezes the action to fit the franchise.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jul 2, 2018
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Anthony Lane
Prepare to be surprised by joy, at the outset, and to wind up baffled and sad. Not that the saga is complete; many of the relevant files, at Yale, will not be unsealed until 2066. Less than fifty years to go. I can’t wait.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jun 25, 2018
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Anthony Lane
Only after the movie ends do you understand what Debra Granik, with a consummate sleight of hand, has done. Here, among the peaceful trees, without a shot fired in anger, she’s made a war film.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jun 25, 2018
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Richard Brody
The Zellner brothers, David and Nathan, wrote and directed this Western near-parody; though methodically conceived and occasionally tense, it’s slight and sluggish.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jun 18, 2018
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Richard Brody
The script, by Robert Rodat, skips around in time to elucidate the amped-up drama, but it never gets close to Berg’s own character. The film, directed by Ben Lewin, strongly suggests that Berg was gay, but leaves the theme undeveloped.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jun 18, 2018
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Anthony Lane
Here’s the thing, though. Hereditary is far more upsetting than it is frightening, and I would hesitate to recommend it to the readily traumatized.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jun 11, 2018
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Anthony Lane
The film, which kicks off in a flurry of visual tricks and narrative switchbacks, grows plainer in the later stages, and its concluding mood is surprisingly sad; these kids, who yearned to be something special, turned out to be anything but.- The New Yorker
- Posted May 31, 2018
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Anthony Lane
The most surprising aspect of the film is its suburban mildness, plus the hapless charm of its hero, Enn (Alex Sharp).- The New Yorker
- Posted May 28, 2018
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Anthony Lane
How keenly you respond to it will depend on how tempted you are by the salad days of Solo. Personally, I preferred him in “The Force Awakens” (2015), at the other end of his career.- The New Yorker
- Posted May 28, 2018
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Anthony Lane
They have pruned, or purged, the drama until it runs just over an hour and a half, and, in so doing, mislaid its nervous languor.- The New Yorker
- Posted May 14, 2018
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Anthony Lane
Nobody, not even a hard-core Schrader fan, could claim that First Reformed makes for easy listening, or viewing. If anything, it outstrips its predecessors in severity.- The New Yorker
- Posted May 14, 2018
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Richard Brody
Filmworker amounts to yet another rite of devotion in the ongoing cult of Kubrick—a cult that worked its power not just on Vitali but on all of modern cinema.- The New Yorker
- Posted May 10, 2018
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Richard Brody
Avowals of literary ambitions and familial devotion, stories of death and faith, and a bold dramatic structure—based on flashbacks and leaps forward in time—set the vagaries of work and love on the firm footing of destiny.- The New Yorker
- Posted May 10, 2018
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Anthony Lane
Beast is at its best when Buckley is at her most undaunted, showing us Moll at her most extreme — when she lies down by moonlight, for instance, in the shallow hole where a murder victim was found, beside a potato field.- The New Yorker
- Posted May 7, 2018
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Anthony Lane
The sad fact, however, is that, as Tully proceeds, it tumbles into clunkiness.- The New Yorker
- Posted May 7, 2018
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Reviewed by
Anthony Lane
Let the Sunshine In is said to be loosely based on Roland Barthes’s “A Lover’s Discourse” — very loosely, I would argue, in the same way that “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre” was based on a branch of Home Depot. As for Claire Denis, anybody new to her methods will be addled by her breaking and stretching of the rules.- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 30, 2018
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Anthony Lane
The plot consists of bits: a fiery slugfest, a pause for bonding, a quick weep, and a patch of jokey repartee, before the slugging returns. Acts of sacrifice are dotted throughout, and we are urged to applaud the burgeoning fellowship of those who unite against Thanos, but, in truth, it’s every man for himself.- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 30, 2018
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Richard Brody
The exaggerated, unambiguous expressivity and the connect-the-dots definitions of character (featuring pat confessions and reheated memories) reflect the closed-off academicism of acting workshops and screenplay pitches rather than the open-ended complexities of life.- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 26, 2018
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Richard Brody
Serge Bozon’s sharply political comedy—a giddily imaginative reworking of Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic tale—stars Isabelle Huppert, who revels in its sly blend of dissonant humor, intellectual fervor, and macabre violence.- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 26, 2018
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Anthony Lane
We are left to rue This Is Our Land as an opportunity missed, and to wonder how else the tale could have been told.- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 23, 2018
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Richard Brody
The dramatic fusion of physical and administrative power captures nothing less than the bloody forging of modernity.- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 12, 2018
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Richard Brody
Dumont films Joan’s spiritual conflicts and confrontations with playful exuberance but avoids frivolity; the ardent actors infuse Joan’s spirit of revolt with the eternal passions of youth.- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 12, 2018
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Anthony Lane
That is why, of the two tales, A Quiet Place is not just more enjoyable but, alien invaders notwithstanding, more coherently plausible, revelling in the logic of well-grounded terror.- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 9, 2018
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Anthony Lane
Some strains of this fearsome film, to be honest, feel overworked and arch. When Joe finds his white-haired mother sitting in front of the TV, for example, does it have to be showing “Psycho”?- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 9, 2018
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Anthony Lane
Buscemi is the least grass-fed of actors, meant for the rat-run of city streets, and, if I didn’t quite believe in him as a country guy, I believed even less in Chloë Sevigny as a cynical jockey with a set of broken bones. But Plummer, who recently played the kidnapped John Paul Getty III, in “All the Money in the World,” grounds and tethers the movie, as an unclaimed soul with barely a dollar to his name.- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 2, 2018
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Anthony Lane
I saw the film in IMAX, and a week later I’m still waiting for the safe return of my optic nerves, but it was the meagre emotional charge that shocked me most. Toward the end, as in many Spielberg movies, there are tears, but, for once, they feel unearned.- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 2, 2018
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Richard Brody
The movie’s panoramic cityscapes teem with the gritty details of emotional life: romance and chores, hope and despair and loss, bitter resentments and rowdy reckonings with mortality.- The New Yorker
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Anthony Lane
The cracking of the mystery, at the conclusion of Gemini, is daft and unsatisfying, but no matter.- The New Yorker
- Posted Mar 26, 2018
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Anthony Lane
The performance that lingers, once the tale is told, is that of Jay Pharoah as Nate, a fellow-patient on Sawyer’s ward, who has furtively kept hold of his cell phone (she was deprived of hers), and who lends the film an understated calm.- The New Yorker
- Posted Mar 26, 2018
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