The New Leader
The New Leader is not a Tomatometer-approved publication. Reviews from this
publication only count toward the Tomatometer when written by the following
Tomatometer-approved critic(s):
Manny Farber
Rating
Title/Year
Author
1
This movie suffocates you with Hemingway's puerile notions about what makes men heroes and cowards, and it will probably sell only the five-year-old yeggs in the audience.
Posted Nov 17, 2021
2
Crossfire (1947)
[Crossfire] has the neatness of a Chiclet, the tone of a nickel, and the speed of a hiccup.
Posted Nov 17, 2021
3
The Sound and the Fury (1959)
In many ways, "Sound" is a bad joke... However, everything outside the story is sharply etched and fairly gripping for an opulent movie.
Posted Sep 15, 2021
4
Lonelyhearts (1958)
5
Rio Bravo (1959)
Rio Bravo is a soft, slack, not very rousing Western by a man (Howard Hawks) who knows better, having supervised a nearly endless chain of masterful journey films.
Posted Sep 15, 2021
6
Wild Strawberries (1957)
7
8
9
The Hustler (1961)
10
Splendor in the Grass (1961)
11
12
My Son John (1952)
13
The Nun's Story (1959)
When the plot turns up, Zinnemann reduces each heroism to kernel size and then resumes his tasteful but rather insipid documentation.
Posted Sep 14, 2021
14
The Horse Soldiers (1959)
15
Middle of the Night (1959)
16
Some Like It Hot (1959)
17
Room at the Top (1959)
Room has a tricked-up impressiveness that holds the spectator's mind long after the movie's windup.
Posted Sep 14, 2021
18
Compulsion (1959)
Compulsion has surprising power, the feeling of a new intellectualism being poured into the handsomely mounted "liberal" juggernauts Sam Goldwyn once produced.
Posted Sep 14, 2021
19
With no editing rhythm and only amateurish composition, Bergman keeps action to an all-time minimum.
Posted Sep 14, 2021
20
Odds Against Tomorrow (1959)
The result is a tricky but tough movie about a bank robbery that has a lot of insights into the decrepit, nearly hopeless life, and, like all Wise films, needs only a good story.
Posted Sep 14, 2021
21
The Black Orchid (1958)
22
He Who Must Die (1957)
Pleasant to look at, with a delicate, if stale artistry, but, nevertheless, not much to think about.
Posted Sep 14, 2021
23
This ghoulish portrait accomplishes a feat that is rare in current mixed-goodies film... Siodmak's best moments, flexibly relaxed or tight, seem comfortably inventive.
Posted Sep 14, 2021
24
Molinaro's Back to the Wall is a dully inactive throwback to the last days of Hollywood "B" crime films.
Posted Sep 13, 2021
25
Look Back in Anger (1958)
26
Monsieur Verdoux (1947)