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
Despite his confident and unfussy direction, Dickinson owes most of Urchin‘s success to his lead actor, Frank Dillane.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 20, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Wolf Man rarely bares its teeth, opting instead for tail-tucked melancholy. Relatively absent of jumpy gotchas or relieving humor—though there is a slightly tongue-in-cheek moment involving a doggy door—the film relies on injecting its Gothic origins with a dose of modern dread. Dangers lurk outside the home, but could just as easily infiltrate it. The march of death could hasten its pace for anyone at any time, rendering those around them impotent.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jan 15, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
The crossdressing, androgynous heroine, whose internal struggle around binary gender roles still feels fresh, grounds the broad emotions and classic, over-the-top aesthetic permeating the film.- The A.V. Club
- Posted May 1, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Though initially revolving around the attention to detail that takes center stage when creating a world of silent naturalism, the script from Zilbalodis and Matīss Kaža sometimes overpowers the incredible showcase of light, color, and movement with out-of-place cartoonishness.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Nov 19, 2024
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- Jacob Oller
Corbin’s film is brutal and sad, thanks to its brutal and sad origins and the abilities of Boyega, but its wandering eye is just the latest to gloss over Brian Easley.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 23, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
That stupid-smart mix of clunkers, wordplay, old-school set-ups, prop humor, and left-field ideas that the writers just couldn’t stop laughing at doesn’t inherently make for a comedy classic—especially as a late plot escalation draws attention to the dull sheen shining over much of the film—but it does prove how effective these films’ formula can be when followed properly.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 30, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Bloodlines honors a legacy of unrepentant silliness and gleeful gore with a knowing wink.- The A.V. Club
- Posted May 13, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
This fable’s push to meet, then fix, your heroes can still sound as saccharine as a solo acoustic set, but it’s smart enough to undercut itself early and often.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 26, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
When Power sticks to its experts, its case is compellingly assembled, its points lucidly made (backed up with archival images) and its unspoken importance undeniable.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 15, 2024
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- Jacob Oller
The Day The Earth Blew Up could honestly stand a bit more of that madness.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 10, 2025
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- Jacob Oller
Once the documentary has made its easy point, it doesn’t have much else on its mind aside from making it again and again. For some, that’ll be eye-opening enough, but I don’t think they’re the people who’re watching documentaries about rap lyrics.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 29, 2024
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- Jacob Oller
Exit 8 excels at capturing that isolation and disaffection in an elegant environmental ouroboros, though what it does once it establishes its atmosphere never matches that simple artistry.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Apr 9, 2026
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- Jacob Oller
Aside from these shallow moments of over-explanation and a kinetic ending that lifts whole cloth from the aforementioned Beau Travail, this exciting debut boasts some honest and cutting commentary around these angry, confused little boys.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jan 2, 2026
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- Jacob Oller
Strange World’s embrace and rejection of both tradition and modernity can be confounding, despite the undeniable beauty it finds along the way.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 21, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
A film about nostalgic escape play-acting an old-fashioned genre has plenty of meta potential to comment upon the entertainment industry’s IP obsession and monetization of arrested development. Reminiscence isn’t quite assured enough for either. Instead, it’s pulp that hasn’t been boiled hard enough, its ideas slowly replaced by machinery.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 20, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
While the youth are still game to rebel, the film’s calculated spontaneity leaves its travelers stranded in search of something real, an ironically contrived quest whose very undertaking undermines its goal- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 11, 2024
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- Jacob Oller
Where Chicken Run once played off of the specific aesthetics of WWII POW films with dark humor, Dawn of the Nugget loses its identity in favor of a harmless playfulness interchangeable with a Madagascar or Ice Age sequel.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 14, 2023
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- Jacob Oller
Eremita (Anthologies) offers bursts of such inspired and inhibited strangeness in an uneven assessment of life, documenting this specific period around the world through a diverse spread that’s very imperfection is relatable to anyone that’s tried to get anything done under quarantine.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 1, 2021
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- Jacob Oller
Prickly characters and a knack for mortifying situations strain to break free from When You Finish Saving the World’s limited and dispassionate plotting.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 21, 2022
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- Jacob Oller
The Outwaters’ chthonic calling card showcases a jack-of-all-trades horror artist, even when it’s more upsetting than scary, but its labyrinth can quickly feel like a straight line, skillfully obscured.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 13, 2023
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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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