We can't tell, with as little information as that. It entirely depends on the film speed, type and storage conditions. In general, fast film decomposes sooner than slow film, colour film sooner than black and white, and it first of all becomes evident on slide film. Heat will significantly decrease the shelf life of film.
A 2005 expired ISO 800 slide film from a hot attic will presumably be destroyed beyond any usefulness (being not only 800% over expiration, but also stored in conditions much worse than specified), while a ISO 100 black and white film from air conditioned storage expired in 2008 will presumably be as good as new (being merely 100% over expiration, in better conditions than calculated). Colour negative will sit somewhere in between - I'd expect a 2008 100 ISO film to give mediocre results in a wet print, but it will probably auto-correct and scan without a hitch, while a 800 or 1600 ISO film from 2003 will be firmly in the Lomo camp of over-exposed or cross-processed film even if you throw all possible post-processing at it.