Jake Coyle
Select another critic »For 402 reviews, this critic has graded:
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49% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jake Coyle's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 68 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Licorice Pizza | |
| Lowest review score: | Dolittle | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 302 out of 402
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Mixed: 78 out of 402
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Negative: 22 out of 402
402
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Jake Coyle
The movie is unabashedly romantic about the Vandals but it’s equally dubious about the rugged masculinity they embody, too. “The Bikeriders” has its hands firmly on the throttle just it does the brakes.- The Associated Press
- Posted Jun 20, 2024
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- Jake Coyle
Babygirl, which Reijn also wrote, is sometimes a bit much. (In one scene, Samuel feeds Romy saucers of milk while George Michael’s “Father Figure” blares.) But its two lead actors are never anything but completely magnetic.- The Associated Press
- Posted Dec 25, 2024
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- Jake Coyle
Aster, who also wrote the film, fills his movie with foreshadowing clues that give the gruesome events to come a cruel note of inevitability. There’s a curse on this family, whether by ghost or DNA.- The Associated Press
- Posted Jun 7, 2018
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- Jake Coyle
It’s an affecting window into what remains very possibly the most benevolent broadcast ever regularly beamed out on the small screen.- The Associated Press
- Posted Jun 7, 2018
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- Jake Coyle
Wakanda Forever is overlong, a little unwieldy and somewhat mystifyingly steers toward a climax on a barge in the middle of the Atlantic. But Coogler’s fluid command of mixing intimacy with spectacle remains gripping.- The Associated Press
- Posted Nov 8, 2022
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- Jake Coyle
To a remarkable degree, Happening is viscerally connected with its protagonist, closely detailing not just her navigation of social taboos and restrictions but capturing her unapologetic determination. It’s a movie about abortion, yes, but it’s also a coming-of-age tale about a woman’s resolve.- The Associated Press
- Posted May 3, 2022
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- Jake Coyle
I’m Thinking of Ending Things nearly sustains something beautiful and sad that blends consciousness and time.- The Associated Press
- Posted Sep 4, 2020
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- Jake Coyle
The most memorable images in Still are those of a present-day Fox in frame, speaking straight into the camera. The effects of Parkinson’s are visible but so is the jaunty, self-deprecating actor we’ve always known.- The Associated Press
- Posted May 10, 2023
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- Jake Coyle
Marcel the Shell With Shoes On could be considered a kids movie or an art-house indie (A24 is releasing). But its proper audience might be anyone who’s ever felt sanded down by life, and could use a roll in Marcel’s rover.- The Associated Press
- Posted Jun 22, 2022
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- Jake Coyle
Here is a sweeping historical tapestry — no one does it better today than Scott — with a damning, almost satirical portrait at its center. That mix — Scott’s spectacle and Phoenix’s the-emperor-has-no-clothes performance — makes Napoleon a rivetingly off-kilter experience.- The Associated Press
- Posted Nov 16, 2023
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- Jake Coyle
The Old Guard, while in many ways typical, is wonderfully unconventional in all kinds of less obvious ways.- The Associated Press
- Posted Jul 16, 2020
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- Jake Coyle
A slinky, slick caper that finds ways to distort expectations while unfolding a puzzle-box narrative.- The Associated Press
- Posted Feb 8, 2023
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- Jake Coyle
Like its predecessor, “Dune: Part Two” thrums with an intoxicating big-screen expressionism of monoliths and mosquitos, fevered visions and messianic fervor — more dystopian dream, or nightmare, than a straightforward narrative.- The Associated Press
- Posted Feb 21, 2024
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- Jake Coyle
Woman of the Hour will surely send many looking up this stranger-than-fiction story. But Kendrick’s achievement is in capturing, from a woman’s point of view, just how hard it can be to pick a serial killer out of an all-male line-up.- The Associated Press
- Posted Oct 17, 2024
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- Jake Coyle
The documentary, directed by Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk, is vigilant in widening is lens to capture the broader problems at USA Gymnastics.- The Associated Press
- Posted Jun 25, 2020
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- Jake Coyle
But for all its fast-paced zaniness, The Mitchells vs. the Machines, scripted by Rianda and his writing partner Jeff Rowe (also co-director), is basically a good old-fashioned family road trip movie, and the Mitchells slide in somewhere between the Griswolds and a more accident-prone Incredibles.- The Associated Press
- Posted Apr 29, 2021
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- Jake Coyle
As played by Johansson, excellent here, every action for Natasha is tinged with acceptance and revulsion for her own nature. Black Widow becomes, kind of stirringly, a movie not about franchise extension but sisterhood, improvised families and traumatic pasts.- The Associated Press
- Posted Jun 29, 2021
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- Jake Coyle
It takes a little while to get going...The “Borat” sequel will make you laugh and squirm as much as it will send shudders down your spine.- The Associated Press
- Posted Oct 22, 2020
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- Jake Coyle
What distinguishes The Nun is its silky, sumptuous shadows. Directed by British filmmaker Corin Hardy (“The Hallows”) and shot by Maxime Alexander (who was also cinematographer on the “Conjuring” spinoff “Annabelle: Creation,” The Nun shrouds itself so much in darkness that it at times verges on becoming a nightmarish abstraction. You almost lose sense of what exactly is going on, as Sister Irene falls into a labyrinthine abyss.- The Associated Press
- Posted Sep 5, 2018
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- Jake Coyle
While Green’s Halloween, which he penned with Danny McBride and Jeff Fradley, has faithfully adopted much of what so resonated in Carpenter’s genre-creating film — the stoic killer, the gruesome executions, the suburban nightmares — what makes his Halloween such a thrill is how it deviates from its long-ago predecessor.- The Associated Press
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Jake Coyle
The Death of Stalin may be both Iannucci’s darkest and most timely satire yet. More than anything he’s done before, Iannucci has narrowed the distance between slapstick and savagery, prompting us to contemplate — even as we’re cackling — their uncomfortable proximity.- The Associated Press
- Posted Mar 10, 2018
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- Jake Coyle
Vol. 3 is a messy, overstuffed finale. But you rarely question whether Gunn’s heart is in it. Sometimes it spoils some of that effect by trying too hard to juxtapose tonal extremes, and show off its brash juggling act. Yet whatever this sweet, surreal sci-fi shamble is that Gunn has created, everyone here seems to believe ardently in it.- The Associated Press
- Posted Apr 28, 2023
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- Jake Coyle
Regardless of any incongruities, “Monkey Man” makes for a forceful directorial debut from Patel. More than anything else, he brings a compelling gravity to a film that is quite serious about getting seriously brutal.- The Associated Press
- Posted Apr 3, 2024
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- Jake Coyle
In Us, Peele has produced a terrifying artifact: a sinister ballet of doppelgangers and inversions that makes flesh the unseen underbelly lurking beneath every sunny American dream and behind every contented nuclear family. It’s a scissor-sharp rebuke to anyone who’s ever held hands and sang “Kumbaya.”- The Associated Press
- Posted Mar 20, 2019
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- Jake Coyle
Paolo Sorrentino’s films can be overwrought, grotesque and uneven but they are rarely not alive. His latest, The Hand of God, is a catalog of wonders — of miracles both banal and eternal.- The Associated Press
- Posted Dec 1, 2021
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- Jake Coyle
By breaking down some of the old mythology, Johnson has staked out new territory. For the first time in a long time, a “Star Wars” film feels forward-moving.- The Associated Press
- Posted Jan 2, 2018
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- Jake Coyle
It doesn’t all fit together, and I Care a Lot has ultimately no way of resolving its fairly ludicrous plot. But it’s strong, gripping, unpredictable pulp, and Pike pulls something off that few else could as a protagonist. She’s quite detestable and completely compelling.- The Associated Press
- Posted Feb 19, 2021
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- Jake Coyle
For an actress who’s hustled to get to this point, “One of Them” days is perfect platform for Palmer, scrappy and unstoppable.- The Associated Press
- Posted Jan 15, 2025
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- Jake Coyle
In this forensic portrait of war, the only way to not get what’s happening on the ground is to be too far from it. François Truffaut famously said there’s no such thing as an anti-war film because movies inherently glamorize war. “Warfare,” though, is intent on challenging that old adage.- The Associated Press
- Posted Apr 8, 2025
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- Jake Coyle
Dosa uses July’s narration to frame the Kraffts’ story with a playful sense of wonder and whimsy — a sometimes overly intrusive, too neatly packaged device in a film where what’s on screen is so overwhelmingly powerful that it might not need the extra layer.- The Associated Press
- Posted Jul 5, 2022
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