Time Out New York's Scores
- Movies
For 2,049 reviews, this publication has graded:
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30% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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68% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 7.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 54
| Highest review score: |
Critic Score
100
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| Lowest review score: |
Critic Score
0
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Score distribution:
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Positive: 433 out of 2049
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Mixed: 1,403 out of 2049
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Negative: 213 out of 2049
2,049
movie reviews
- By critic score
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich 100
No simplistic status parable. It’s more a psychological snapshot of a person forever doomed to remain a voyeur to her own life -
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Reviewed by
David Fear 100
To fall in love with it, viewers only have to be receptive to a movie that examines the ties that bind with grace, wit and depth. -
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich 100
Filmmakers from Jacques Rivette to Hou Hsiao-hsien have treated the City of Light like Alice’s rabbit hole; writer-director Hong Sang-soo similarly embraces the fantasy, but goes one step further in this extraordinary character study by fully erasing the line that separates the actual from the fictional. -
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich 100
Sokurov, who also acted as director of photography, films the character and his surroundings with the eye of a newly arrived visitor to another world. -
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich 100
It’s likely that only Herzog would dare to, and succeed at, resolving this singular cinematic object by contemplating the fate of an abandoned basketball. -
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich 100
Strangely enough, our knowledge of what’s to come makes Word Is Out that much more affecting, because it shows that there were—and are—pockets of peace amid the brutality of an ongoing civil-rights struggle. -
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Critic Score 100
Jersey Shore may be the hyped example of trashy onscreen “reality,” but this portrait of an upstate working-poor family forsakes guilty-pleasure exploitation and simply wows you in every other way. -
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf 100
Sly and suggestive, Lourdes is a cosmic black comedy that bumps up against the metaphysical. -
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf 100
Why do we care? Because never before have the steps to thugdom, as depressing as that destination may be, been so rigorously detailed, neither romanticized nor negated. Don’t miss. -
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich 100
This is Young in his playroom, grabbing his toys at random while indulging his every antimelodic whim, and Demme’s off-the-cuff approach makes for the perfect aesthetic complement. -
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich 100
The most impressive aspect of Breillat’s feature is that it agitates like the best fairy tales, seducing us with otherworldliness before sticking the knife in and permanently inscribing the moral. -
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich 100
The meanings of Close-Up shift, subtly and profoundly, with every viewing; the only certainty is that its rewards are boundless. -
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf 100
That rarest of art documentaries, one that actually leaves viewers with a better sense of the gifted versus the phony. -
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf 100
World on a Wire is the discovery of the season, rarely screened in America but very much a key chapter in Fassbinder's story--a step toward bigger budgets and slicker production values, yet clarifying of his core artistic legacy. -
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf 100
Again, Granik has foregrounded a bold woman, expertly balanced between fearlessness and Ree's own private nervousness. -
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf 100
How perfectly perverse: In a summer crammed with sequels, remakes, '80s nostalgia and the frustrated sense of "What else y'got?" comes the most original nightmare in years. -
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Reviewed by
David Fear 100
The attention to visuals is above and beyond what most vérité is capable of; doing double duty as the film's cinematographer, Fan demonstrates a pitch-perfect photojournalistic eye. -
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf 100
Is Joaquin Phoenix putting us on? After watching the terrifying, near-brilliant exposé I'm Still Here, in which the Oscar nominee's public and private unraveling becomes a sick joke, the question doesn't matter. -
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf 100
It's a grandly entertaining reminder of everything we used to go to the movies for (and still can't get online): sparkling dialogue, thorny situations, soulful performances, and an unusually open-ended and relevant engagement with a major social issue of the day: how we (dis)connect. -
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf 100
Though it runs an epic five-and-a-half hours (it was made for French TV), Carlos books like no film since "Goodfellas." You will not be bored, ever. -
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich 100
Indeed, you leave the film feeling like Wiseman has given you a glimpse of one of those ephemeral ports in a storm to which all of us retreat at times.- Posted Oct 21, 2010
- Read full review
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf 100
Amer could exist only as a movie, not as a novel or a pop song. If you give it a whirl, you won't simply get drunk on its immediacy; you may throw out plot and character altogether.- Posted Oct 26, 2010
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Reviewed by
Joshua Rothkopf 100
Paradoxically, this is not a tale about summoning inner strength, but about shedding pride. Sometimes, there's no choice.- Posted Nov 3, 2010
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Reviewed by
David Fear 100
Shoah's ultimate legacy, however, is being the final word on the Final Solution-one that renders every well-intentioned dramatic re-creation of such horrors into repulsive Ausch-kitsch by comparison.- Posted Dec 10, 2010
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- Posted Dec 22, 2010
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich 100
These characters are more than what we see on the surface, and it's thanks to Leigh's rigorous yet generous eye that we never just gawk at the drama.- Posted Dec 22, 2010
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