Jacob Oller
Select another critic »For 358 reviews, this critic has graded:
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35% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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62% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jacob Oller's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 63 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | In the Heights | |
| Lowest review score: | Five Nights at Freddy's 2 | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 204 out of 358
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Mixed: 113 out of 358
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Negative: 41 out of 358
358
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Jacob Oller
The film is better at punching the clock than punching the bad guys. To that end, it’s an honest day’s work from Ritchie and Statham, but not an especially entertaining one.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 6, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
Captain Underpants’ plethora of animation styles (including a wonderful sock puppet sequence) separates the film into imaginative sublayers, keeping it from feeling like the one-joke wonder that it often edges towards.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 8, 2017
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- Jacob Oller
Scrapper isn’t funny or sweet enough to overcome some of its more cutesy leanings, and it’s not inventive enough to stand out from its peers covering the same kind of burgeoning parent-child relationship. But it hangs together, as brief and unsatisfying as its narrative may be, which proves Regan capable of pulling off a feature, even if we’ll need to wait for a second film to fully see her more off-the-wall ideas flourish.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
Though the filmmaking is perfectly competent and sometimes engaging, these moments where things click in a way that doesn’t feel like a teacher tap-tap-tapping on a chalkboard’s spelled-out “themes” are rare. It’s a muddled and messy movie, colorfully congested with ideas that often seem contradictory.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 5, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
As the film moves further and further from its inciting secret, watching Inez and her son age, it fades beneath their countless tone-shifting hardships—revealing a film stronger when its close-shot realism is echoed in the script.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 30, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
Directed by Jacqueline Castel in her feature debut, My Animal’s moody dreams are in a territorial brawl with its small-town realism, which in turn barks and snaps at its soapy plot. Its fable eventually hunts down more than a trite analogy for perceived deviance, but its blend of visual and narrative tones favors the laconic over the lycanthropic.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 30, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
It’s still a bit of a romp, but sacrificing both its logical plotting and dark humor with shortcuts (and not quite having an ending, just kind of stopping once it’s out of gas), cuts the legs out from under Fresh.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 24, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
What initially feels like a budget presentation about the issues of being stuck in space and several proposed solutions (explored at various lengths) ends up feeling both too structured and, eventually, too scattered for its fascinating yet still speculative subject matter.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 6, 2024
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- Jacob Oller
Caught between these conflicting expectations, it’s hard to appreciate Cruella as a whole. It’s overlong, with endless endings, and invites more conversations about it as a curious corporate product than as a cohesive movie. But it can also be perversely enjoyable with its flashy playlist-while-playing-dress-up aesthetic and brash, heightened central actresses.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 26, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
The look of Dragon Ball is changing, and Super Hero represents its growing pains. But it also represents a willingness to look its longevity in the face and, like all long-running serials, see what passing the torch once again really means.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 19, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
An irreverent mix of genres taken completely seriously but with no small amount of fun, Devil’s Gate wears its script’s stupidity on its sleeve and allows its creature effects and committed cast to carry it throughout.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 4, 2018
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- Jacob Oller
There is power in the inescapable, in the dreaded endpoint of becoming news after a lifetime spent fearing it—mourning it. But despite its length and artistic competence, Brother’s lack of affecting specificity displays rather than embodys grief.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 8, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
A small cadre of performers and a play-like production—split into three contained acts that leap decades and single-location settings—keep the indie charmingly subdued, but the movie is so literal when drawing attention to its own underdeveloped themes that it boldly challenges you to be ignorant of the genre’s most basic philosophical bullet points.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 8, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
Those looking for bleak, slow horror and who are willing to suspend plenty of disbelief might want to check it out, but it won’t rock the worlds of the rest of us.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 25, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
The main novelty, and the film’s primary pleasure, is the commitment of its cast to its bloody, profane vapidity.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 9, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
The main attractions for Marvel’s Ten Ring circus are better when freed from the MCU’s captivity.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 23, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
Its dedication to Long’s point-of-view is admirable, but Lee’s filmmaking hits the brakes like a student driver, sacrificing what made the framing narrative enticing in the first place.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 13, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
Like its muddy multi-movie gamble, the ideas are there for Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul. But like its characters, it’s happy to follow the path of least resistance.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 26, 2022
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- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 4, 2017
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- Jacob Oller
The Devil Made Me Do It proves that, with The Conjuring franchise at least, the devil you know is far, far better than the one you don’t. Chaves doesn’t quite manage to close the Warren files, but his efforts in the universe are now two of the weakest.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 1, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
Despite a furiously alpha-male James McAvoy raging through the movie—nearly making this new take into an enjoyable, scareless, hoot-and-holler romp—Blumhouse’s hollowed-out remake undermines its nasty source material with its Americanized sheen.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 10, 2024
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- Jacob Oller
Like the rest of Annette, the dry humor isn’t funny enough to fully sustain its cool-kid commentary and the filmmaking is never grand enough to fully sell the caricature.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 4, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
True to its genre-defining premise, the Malay actioner doesn’t break much ground during its lackadaisical story of an in-over-his-head gambler attempting to make good, but Bakar shoots it with enough inconsistent, eclectic energy that it’s occasionally more watchable than its ideas deserve.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 7, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
Not just an incredible waste of a spectacular performance, but a film more caught up in ogling tragedy than dealing with it.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 25, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
By only brushing up against the factors that make its case fascinatingly, timelessly American, The Burial stays soft, a trial by pillow-fight—but that’s how you please a crowd.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 16, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
Familiar pieces playing a familiar game to familiar ends won’t make Martyrs Lane anyone’s favorite horror movie, but it’s put together well enough to offer comfort and intrigue in small doses.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 7, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
Despite a few moments of heightened bliss that remind us what kind of talent it has in front of the camera (and the operatic possibilities of Hong Kong action), Raging Fire’s dull discussion of policing never lights a fire.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 9, 2021
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- The Film Stage
- Posted Mar 2, 2017
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- Jacob Oller
Learning about Gibson’s ‘roid rage from their treatment, and Falley’s acceptance of it, is a more moving example of their care for one another than much of what the film finds in their shared profession.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Nov 14, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Love Hurts proves that honest emotions aren’t everything; sometimes you can just buy yourself enough goodwill to get by with last-minute junk.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Feb 6, 2025
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- The A.V. Club
- Posted May 30, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
It’s a straightforward slasher with a tech-savvy twist, ironically not outlandish enough to stand out from the formerly forbidden footage filling our feeds every single day.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Apr 6, 2026
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- Jacob Oller
The abusive push-pull between America and Mexico, the conflict between the exotic fantasy of a Latin lover and its xenophobic underbelly, crashes into two people too ill-defined to function as anything more than symbols.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Feb 25, 2026
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- Jacob Oller
Though Steve is a capable conduit for the myriad familiar dramas of juvenile delinquent storytelling, there’s just not enough time in the day (or the film’s wishy-washy 24-hours-in-hell structure) to give anything the attention it deserves.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 1, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
As soon as you unearth a place’s past, it lives on in you—changes you. This is the heart of folk horror that Enys Men speaks to, but its dull, repetitive, padded delivery of images makes its genre findings (in words British enough to befit the film) weak tea.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 29, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
Plenty of the film feels vital—its observations of a nation’s shifting attitude towards war, towards hate, is crushing and familiar.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Feb 1, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
If ever there was a case made that being on the right side of history, in the right place and with the right story isn’t enough to make satisfying non-fiction, Kim’s Video is it.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 22, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
A Compassionate Spy is not a thrilling recollection of treason. It has little to say about the actual espionage that Hall pulled off when he was an 18-year-old Harvard grad working on the Manhattan Project.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 3, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
It makes less sense for this story, haphazard and lost, to follow one of Disney’s better films of the last 20 years. There’s almost an affecting message, where teamwork on a small scale results in greater togetherness on a large scale.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Nov 26, 2024
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- Jacob Oller
Bleak and crisp and cold as an Icelandic waterfall, Lamb is a movie with a sheepheaded toddler in great knitwear, the vague looming of something sinister and a filmmaker that can’t seem to wrangle it all.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 7, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
This boneheaded movie’s got a dull point, but at least a lot of rich jerks get murderized by fanged, stab-happy unicorns.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 26, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Despite remaking much of that film (Taisei Iwasaki and Yuma Yamaguchi’s tense score being one of the most successful throwbacks), Bullet Train Explosion abandons the complicating human factors that gave the original its soul. It makes the same mistake as so many modern blockbusters: confusing bigger, louder, and simpler with better.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Apr 23, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
A story that could truly individualize a massive, era-defining tragedy. In this telling, however, you’ll follow the plot and shed some appropriate tears, but if you come away feeling cheap, you won’t be alone.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 7, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
The pulp and action are sold by Statham with the resigned competence of a factory worker clocking in for a shift, and Breathnach’s over-eager performance is balanced out by her expressive face. They’re a decent team to watch go through the motions, running through underworld contacts and old pals who owe one last favor.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jan 28, 2026
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- Jacob Oller
None of The Gray Man’s still-Bourne thrills are executed with the precise elegance of John Wick, the winking doggery of James Bond or the joyful craftsmanship of Mission: Impossible. Rather, its chaotic Grand Theft Auto filmmaking skates by with the sloppy sufficiency of its own protagonist.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 14, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
Though the simplest pleasures of Favor remain—catty chemistry between Kendrick and Lively, loopy twists, bravura statement outfits—the heat powering the concept has cooled to the extent that, despite the increased body count, the sequel feels as perfunctory as its title. It’s just Another one.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 8, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Though director Reinaldo Marcus Green finds winning performances away from his lead, the milquetoast script serves the tennis patriarch a soft lob—one without potential to inspire or excite, and one that’s constantly reminding us that we already know how it ends.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 22, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
Unfortunately, even though Moonshot aims high, its misfire falls all the way back down to humble terra firma.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 4, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
Bros says many of the right things, often loudly and directly, as it reblazes an already well-marked trail towards normative convention.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 3, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
There are two movies here, and the actors handle that duality well. But the brooding darkness lurking inside these characters needs a drama of its own.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 12, 2018
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- Jacob Oller
Since we don’t really have characters and we pretty much know how this story is going to go, all we’re left with is images—and Staub proves himself a greenhorn every step of the way. The script, for all its by-the-numbers structure, still has plenty of potential for some engaging and unique moments.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 2, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
While Plaza continues to make her case as a versatile A-lister capable of leading the more complex version of this kind of heist film, Emily the Criminal is a little like an initiation that never needed to happen. Her bonafides are proven. But it still stands as another showcase for her, as she shines even through its uninspired racket.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 12, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
The weary and plodding story putters along the redemption arc’s curve, losing faith even in itself along the way.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 20, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
The Public Image is Rotten’s soundtrack is, of course, great, and the candidness from former bandmates regarding their backstabbing and youthful mistakes is certainly refreshing, but it’s all wrapped in a package wearing dad jeans: too safe, too simple, too given to a happy ending.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 13, 2018
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- Jacob Oller
Rather than embracing its premise’s unique potential, Boss Level mires it in tropes and convention.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 5, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
Orienteering from an unsure script, Slumberland’s uninventive visual language dithers around in unreality while leaving its feet firmly planted in the saddest parts of the real world.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 17, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
If Sakra wanted to enter into the wuxia canon, its lucid, lovely excess shouldn’t have stopped with its ceasefires.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 18, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
Berger’s skill with middlebrow crowdpleasers succumbs to empty spectacle; he can still frame a bluntly powerful shot, and he knocks off a few nice Ocean’s Eleven images, but most are just blunt.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 28, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
True to its inspirations, Ash offers up a formal mix between traditional sci-fi filmmaking and frequent first-person segments (either through pseudo-body cam footage or more explicitly video game-like bouts of point-of-view panic) that gives the familiarity a bit more energy than your average knock-off.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 20, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
It ends up like every other three-person romantic dramedy ends up, but at least Love, Brooklyn boasts competent players going through its motions.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jan 31, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
For those who haven’t really thought about the filmmaking behind the glut of true-crime clogging up the streamer carousels, there are some revelatory moments of media criticism in here. But for those more aware of how the sausage is made, it’s simply a light and dry bit of jabbing at a dominant kind of media.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jan 30, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Many of the cuts and interplay between subjects seem like filler rather than commentary; the lightshows of LEDs and flashlights dancing off the dank walls of sewers reveal no more than a flashy visual sensibility.- The Film Stage
- Posted Apr 14, 2016
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- Jacob Oller
Safdie splits the difference, striving to replicate the gritty, in-the-moment documentary feel of the source movie he clearly admires, and coat it in the triple-A Hollywood sheen befitting this kind of serious star vehicle.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 3, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Though it’s still thrilling to hear actors fire out Mamet’s heated arguments, when the dust clears from the film’s dense conversations, what remains is hollow.- The A.V. Club
- Posted May 8, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Filmmaker Amber Fares assembles a ton of footage into a thorough portrait of a disillusioned activist-comedian, though that portrait and the one-woman show it revolves around are themselves limited messengers of a worthwhile call to action.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 29, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Stewart applies an admirably experimental vision to her adaptation, but she can’t translate whatever power she may have found in Yuknavitch’s text to the screen.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Dec 5, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Even if it wasn’t hot on the tail of Pixar’s Hoppers, Swapped would still be an overly familiar adventure towards empathy, one light on comedy and insight despite plenty of visual imagination in its world of flora-fauna hybrids.- The A.V. Club
- Posted May 1, 2026
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- Jacob Oller
But as that film approaches 90 years old, Disney made a remake that looks 100 times worse—and, necessarily, has been updated in an attempt to tell a more human tale. Aside from coating the story in a sickly “live-action remake” sheen, like dipping a juicy red apple in a vat of poison, Snow White also pads out its plot so that the character at the center actually has a character, that her love interest is more than a randy stranger in the woods, and that her foe’s villainy is more political than mythic. But the extra half-hour is just as muddled as the misguided classic elements, all of which forge a tarnished tiara to which Rachel Zegler is the single crown jewel.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 19, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Though the punches maintain their force in Nobody 2, the sole punchline they support has become a grating dad joke, one that you’ve heard so many times that it’s lost all meaning.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Aug 13, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Though crafted with wry care and a captivatingly scuzzy aesthetic, the bittersweet biography is so miserable that the “sweet” ends up as a cloying chaser to old escargot.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 24, 2024
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- Jacob Oller
At the center of it all is Powell, making the same face for an hour and 45 minutes, too unflappable to root for, too smug to magnetize as an inhuman American Psycho. And How To Make A Killing needed to pick a side, either of clownish class comedy or of bitter sociopathic satire.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Feb 18, 2026
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- Jacob Oller
Though its bold genre gamble and strong lead turn from Maisy Stella keep My Old Ass from the YA slush pile, its feint towards being a more cerebral movie about hope and regret, two opposing forces separated only by time, infects the mediocrity of its more traditional story with disappointment.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Sep 12, 2024
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- Jacob Oller
The melancholy absurdity—dragged out over two-and-a-half hours—doesn’t revel in its ironic condemnation. It’s a long sigh, an off-key parody song performed before humanity’s curtain call.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Dec 4, 2024
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