Genevieve Koski
Select another critic »For 48 reviews, this critic has graded:
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62% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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36% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Genevieve Koski's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 63 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Baby Driver | |
| Lowest review score: | The Divergent Series: Insurgent | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 23 out of 48
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Mixed: 22 out of 48
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Negative: 3 out of 48
48
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Genevieve Koski
Its kid-friendly, free-for-all spirit rides atop an undercurrent of pointed commentary about the state of the superhero industry (and the entertainment industry more broadly) that will give those parental guides something to hold on to amid the candy-colored cacophony. Or they could just surrender and enjoy the butt jokes. They’re pretty good butt jokes!- Vox
- Posted Jul 26, 2018
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- Genevieve Koski
It’s a seemingly straightforward “one last job” crime tale mashed up with a jukebox musical romance, part high-octane action flick and part music video, propelled by perfectly calibrated performances and a wicked sense of humor.- Vox
- Posted Jun 27, 2017
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- Genevieve Koski
Rough Night floats on the strength of its performances and its anything-for-a-laugh sensibility.- Vox
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Genevieve Koski
Where Ted managed a respectable ratio of clever (or at least transcendently dumb) gags to lazy/offensive ones, Ted 2 is a repetitive, self-congratulatory slog, dragged down by a haphazard plot and the same third-act problems that ultimately sunk the first film.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jun 25, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
Spy never lets its genre conceit get in the way of its comedy, which delivers more laugh-out-loud moments than any other mainstream comedy so far this year.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jun 4, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
The True Cost’s aim is to make it impossible to ignore fashion’s impact on the world, and it takes an admirably thorough approach to its unwieldy subject. It’s not a particularly cinematic approach, however.- The Dissolve
- Posted May 26, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
While there are individual delights within Pitch Perfect 2’s 115 minutes, they don’t add up to a functional, coherent film. There’s no harmony, only loud grandstanding.- The Dissolve
- Posted May 13, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
Like its main character, Age Of Adaline is a movie out of time, mannered and unconcerned with current trends, and hopelessly unhip. But it’s also beautiful and refreshing in its own earnest, straightforward way. For as ridiculous as Age Of Adaline appears on the surface, it’s surprisingly refined and poised in its execution.- The Dissolve
- Posted Apr 23, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
Everything Monkey Kingdom lacks in scientific rigor, it makes up for in pure entertainment value—and then some.- The Dissolve
- Posted Apr 16, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
For all its grand statements about artistry and identity, Dior And I is most effective as a study of the hard work, both physical and emotional, that goes into creating something new.- The Dissolve
- Posted Apr 8, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
What makes Furious 7 a serious contender for the title of Fast franchise highlight—challenged only by 2011’s Fast Five and its unmatched vault-heist sequence—is the way it embraces the series’ most basic pleasures while amplifying everything tenfold.- The Dissolve
- Posted Apr 2, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
Home feels oddly small-scale for a globe-spanning science-fiction adventure story featuring aliens and flying cars.- The Dissolve
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
It doesn’t make any sense, but Insurgent demands its audience play along anyway. The problem is, the film doesn’t do enough to earn viewers’ trust, or reward it once it’s given.- The Dissolve
- Posted Mar 19, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
Most of Cinderella’s costuming and production design takes a “glitter first, taste second” approach that embodies the film’s cotton-candy style of filmmaking: a heady sugar-rush in the moment, but empty and a little nauseating over the long haul.- The Dissolve
- Posted Mar 11, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
For all its potential pitfalls, The DUFF manages to keep its head above water, thanks to Whitman, Amell, and a willingness to engage with teen-movie clichés in a relatively thoughtful way.- The Dissolve
- Posted Feb 19, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
Vessel is much more than a documentary about abortion rights; it’s about the conviction, creativity, and sacrifice that goes into creating a movement.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jan 12, 2015
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- Genevieve Koski
As a film, Into The Woods is trapped between the stage and the screen, at odds with both its source material and its adopted medium.- The Dissolve
- Posted Dec 22, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
When Annie isn’t functioning as a showcase for Wallis’ tiny preternatural charm, it’s tonally varied to the point of discombobulation.- The Dissolve
- Posted Dec 17, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
The trifecta of Lawrence, Moore, and Hoffman is the movie’s driving force, from both a plot and performance perspective. Together, they imbue Mockingjay with a sense of gravity and significance befitting its tough themes.- The Dissolve
- Posted Nov 20, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
Melodrama is defined by exaggerated characters and events, as well as overt appeals to emotion, and Beyond The Lights fits that mold ably and comfortably. But beneath the shiny surface of music-video imagery and true-loveisms lie some provocative ideas and deep truths about how people relate on a private level vs. a public one.- The Dissolve
- Posted Nov 13, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
It ultimately amounts to a feature-length origin story, but with characters this unknown and execution this fun, that’s an asset, not a liability.- The Dissolve
- Posted Nov 5, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
Rudderless’ biggest flaw is that it’s overly committed to its trajectory, creating obvious cause-and-effect scenarios rather than letting its characters simply live and act within the situation the story places them in.- The Dissolve
- Posted Oct 15, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
Gone Girl reveals itself as an optimal meeting of the minds, a perfect amalgam of a writer and a director with complementary fixations.- The Dissolve
- Posted Oct 1, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
The misused cast is just one of many examples of the unrealized potential of Life After Beth, a film that has good bones, but not enough meat, guts, or—most damningly for a zombie movie—brains.- The Dissolve
- Posted Aug 14, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
Death is a part of life—one that informs everything we do, on some level or another—and watching Ebert characterize whatever time he has left as “money in the bank,” from what viewers know is his deathbed, is life-affirming and heartbreaking in equal measure.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jul 3, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
There are a lot of laughs in They Came Together, but few curveballs. The biggest surprise is that the film feels so safe.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jun 25, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
With its action taking place primarily in the beige-walled, wood-accented environs of legal offices and courthouses, The Case Against 8 compensates for its visual blandness with good old-fashioned storytelling.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jun 5, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
Despite its attention-grabbing logline and gleeful embrace of raunchy, frequently scatological humor, Obvious Child is at heart a well-realized, straight-ahead rom-com, one with the potential to reinvigorate a genre that’s been flagging for decades.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jun 3, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
While it’s occasionally distasteful, it’s an engaging hangout film from beginning to end, thanks to its game performances and smart direction.- The Dissolve
- Posted May 6, 2014
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- Genevieve Koski
True to its Disney lineage, Bears is a theme-park version of reality, but one built on sincere understanding of and affection for the natural world and all its creatures—especially the really cute ones.- The Dissolve
- Posted Apr 17, 2014
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