Inkoo Kang
Select another critic »For 395 reviews, this critic has graded:
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38% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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58% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 9.4 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Inkoo Kang's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 56 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Shoplifters | |
| Lowest review score: | Ghost Team One | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 166 out of 395
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Mixed: 144 out of 395
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Negative: 85 out of 395
395
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Inkoo Kang
Where Charlie’s Angels really falters, though, is in the jokes, as Banks is the only actress on screen with any real comic chops. One can’t help wondering what might’ve been if she’d concerned herself more with being her weird self and less with trying to make every woman in the audience feel validated.- Slate
- Posted Nov 14, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
LaBeouf is so revelatory as both writer and actor that the film defies cynicism about its second purpose as celebrity image management. It just makes you excited about the work.- Slate
- Posted Nov 9, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
Dolemite Is My Name delivers on titties, funnies, and kung fu, all mixed up in a syrupy nostalgia that makes the picture’s feel-good populism go down easy. It’s only when the credits roll that you might notice there was little there but froth.- Slate
- Posted Oct 3, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
An immediate entrant into the pantheon of female friendship movies, Hustlers — a pretty much perfect film — makes plain the hollowness of so many other iterations of girl power in studio projects. You can feel its heart beat.- Slate
- Posted Sep 14, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
The heart of the film is the father-son bond, but Chadha, a filmmaker long preoccupied with the inner lives of Desi-British girls and women, also gives Javed’s sister (Nikita Mehta) a lovely reveal. If a couple of segments droop in their strict adherence to Manzoor’s biography, it’s certainly forgivable. This movie won’t blind anyone with its innovation, but it’s got plenty to dazzle and delight.- Slate
- Posted Aug 13, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
It’s not that One Child Nation needs to cater to both sides of the argument, but it would have helped contextualize how often the acts of violence the film chronicles actually happened.- Slate
- Posted Aug 9, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
I felt resentful of my own feelings of gratitude while watching The Kitchen, a joyless and exhausting movie that squanders the talents of a dream trio: McCarthy, Tiffany Haddish, and Elisabeth Moss.- Slate
- Posted Aug 7, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
On American screens, at least, there is an almost shocking dearth of honest stories about European colonialism, one of the greatest forces to reshape the globe in the last half-millennium, and Kent’s humanist revisions of the rape-revenge and Western genres represents a visionary attempt to rectify this. It may not always be easy to sit through, but we’re nonetheless lucky to witness it.- Slate
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
The subject matter is inevitably somber, but the picture is also mischievously funny. Wang pirouettes along some tonal hairpins — in one scene, I guffawed in the midst of wracking sobs.- Slate
- Posted Jul 11, 2019
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- Slate
- Posted Jun 14, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
Late Night suggests that Kaling is as fascinated as ever not by the girl next door but by powerful, unruly women — and the unconventional love stories befitting their willful, idiosyncratic selves. But the film may be most notable for its summation of the thinking and rethinking that Kaling has done about her 15 years in Hollywood — and how to fight to change it.- Slate
- Posted Jun 5, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
San Francisco may be waging war against its most vulnerable residents, but if you can enjoy its beauty, as Jimmie and Montgomery do for a magical few days, its unique picturesqueness makes it easy to love.- Slate
- Posted Jun 5, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
The script relies too often on Sasha’s bestie or Marcus’ father pushing the destined couple toward each other, but its smaller moments of naturalistic riffing make up for the rigid plotting.- Slate
- Posted May 30, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
Ritchie’s film still feels shackled by its dutiful allegiance to the source material. But when it gets to be its own thing, it’s a spirited romp that — setting aside the uncanny, off-putting look of Smith’s Genie — has no shortage of charms.- Slate
- Posted May 24, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
Maybe this dream team would be better showcased by a "Tea With the Dames" situation, in which they were allowed to toss out the script and booze it up as their own funny selves. Anyone else up for Chardonnay With the Comedians?- Slate
- Posted May 11, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
Long Shot feels like something new, too — a brogressive rom-com that mixes inconvenient boners and aerodynamic cum with extensive observations about sexism and a rare romanticization of the male helpmate.- Slate
- Posted May 3, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
It doesn’t help that the plot is tortuous, and the resolution is an inarguable letdown. And yet! Mitchell’s ambitions, observations, and moods make the picture a dippy blast, like a hallucinatory trip that definitely goes on too long but is well worth the insights and surprises.- Slate
- Posted Apr 19, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
The key, according to the film, is dialogue and altruism — namely, black overtures to white hate. The onus is as misplaced as the movie’s sympathies.- Slate
- Posted Apr 6, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
If you like postmodern gimmickry and modern dance, and are OK with sitting through nearly 10 minutes of staged talking-head interviews, glum stoner talk about abortion, nausea-inducing filmmaking, characters whose motivations don’t make sense, horror, exploitative child death, and a quasi-coercive lesbian make-out—but just don’t care to be reminded “Drugs! Are! Bad!”: Leave 89 minutes in. Or don’t come at all, because Climax really isn’t about anything more than that.- Slate
- Posted Mar 5, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
Despite the production’s team of scientist consultants, the physics in The Wandering Earth is probably a lot of hooey. But the film’s world building, which takes up much of its first third, is undeniably novel and fascinating. Rarely does a film brag such a technocratic heart.- Slate
- Posted Feb 22, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
Natalie might protest the whitewashing of New York by rom-coms, but Isn’t It Romantic trots out multiple supporting characters of color whose sole roles are to make the white protagonist look good.- Slate
- Posted Feb 13, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
A high-concept comedy about the domestication of a work-obsessed woman that nonetheless managed to win me over.- Slate
- Posted Feb 8, 2019
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- Slate
- Posted Feb 5, 2019
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- Inkoo Kang
A movie so lifeless you’d have more fun guessing the Netflix niche group that the production is supposed to satisfy.- Slate
- Posted Dec 9, 2018
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- Inkoo Kang
The depiction isn’t remotely believable, but with Ronan endowing her character with both a steel spine and a fresh-faced naïveté (in a performance that makes her the film’s sole great asset), it’s fun, even inspiring.- Slate
- Posted Dec 6, 2018
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- Inkoo Kang
In the movies, love is cheap. It’s everywhere and nowhere, too often reduced to a formula or a reward. Beale Street knows better. It restores to love, romantic and familial, its sanctity—an ambition that makes it one of the most distinctive love stories in recent memory.- Slate
- Posted Dec 5, 2018
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- Inkoo Kang
For all its gentle groundedness, a quality that suffuses much of Kore-eda’s work, Shoplifters strenuously resists romanticizing its main characters. Its compassion is more convincing for it. So is its brilliance.- Slate
- Posted Nov 20, 2018
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- Inkoo Kang
There’s something unseemly about singling out this story, about the seemingly narrow scope of racism and how easily it can be undone. Green Book decries those cultural pockets designed to make white people feel good, often at people of color’s expense. But that’s about all it does, too.- Slate
- Posted Nov 18, 2018
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- Inkoo Kang
The wonderfully versatile Brewer, who’s in virtually every scene, pulls off essentially three “characters”: Alice, Alice as Lola, and Bizarro Lola. It’s a bravura performance that flits between several realities while keeping the film grounded as the plot twists make narrative leap after narrative leap.- Slate
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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- Inkoo Kang
The Nutcracker’s onslaught of wholesomeness also lays waste to anything that might stand in its way, leaving it crushed under the boot heels of its tin soldiers.- Slate
- Posted Nov 1, 2018
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