Jared Mobarak
Select another critic »For 635 reviews, this critic has graded:
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65% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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31% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.7 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jared Mobarak's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 68 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Moonlight | |
| Lowest review score: | The Dark Below | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 464 out of 635
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Mixed: 153 out of 635
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Negative: 18 out of 635
635
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Jared Mobarak
Barlow and Senes do a great job keeping things entertaining and plausible insofar as how casualties cross the path of their killers.- The Film Stage
- Posted Oct 10, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
It reaches past the usual rock clichés to recognize that the struggle these women face is more immediate than striving to perform for sold-out crowds or become signed by a label. This is about surviving a chaotic environment marked by past violence while still entrenched in present-day political revolution.- The Film Stage
- Posted Oct 7, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
Don’t expect to know how it’s all going to end; Pereda makes certain to save the blood for the finale.- The Film Stage
- Posted Oct 4, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
The film zooms in to project humanity’s struggle onto Vesper. With one gust of wind (and some tragic losses), health and prosperity can be hers (and ours) again.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 28, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
To say The Swearing Jar is an uplifting film without a clarifier such as “bittersweet” is perhaps a tough sell, but that’s exactly what it is.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 26, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
It’s a delicate scenario that treats its characters with the respect and complexity they deserve.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 22, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
Iliff’s script and Hughes’ direction might not provide anything we haven’t seen before, but both allow the actors the necessary room to give us what we need to stay invested.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 22, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
What begins like a feel-good tale of one woman’s quest to be the best, Stephanie Johnes’ Maya and the Wave quickly transforms into something much bigger. More than simply attempting to rejuvenate her career after three back surgeries, anxiety disorders caused by the trauma of the accident and its public backlash, and a loss of sponsorship, Maya’s journey became a fight for equality.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 20, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
It’s so well-paced that the final twenty minutes hit with an urgency I wasn’t expecting.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 20, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
Expect a breezy affair with good-natured laughter and low stakes. You’ll learn some things and remember others en route to watching as Poitier’s legacy is reinforced with a carefully curated mix of family and friends driven by the sole goal to immortalize their hero.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 20, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
A stirring tribute to a man of many talents, Chevalier gorgeously gives a once-forgotten virtuoso violinist the cinematic treatment.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 17, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
The role of Alice is very much internal and, as such, very reliant upon putting her thoughts onscreen. That we can also see those thoughts in our own minds simply through Kendrick’s thousand-yard stares, moments of lashing out, and visibly draining anxiety is a testament to her commitment to the character and the script’s nuanced complexity to allow her to say so much without saying anything.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 16, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
LaBute is meticulously escalating the danger by providing Hap his wildest dreams in a way that reveals to the audience how their ability to come true is reliant upon him losing control.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 5, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
The film’s simply a bit off-kilter—written with influences blatantly on its sleeves yet uninterested in subverting any assumptions that fact guarantees. I must be missing something.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 25, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
The Immaculate Room isn’t breaking the mold on this type of conceit; if anything it’s purposely embracing a narrow scope of mental fracturing the scenario can ignite and counting on the actors to make it compelling.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 19, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
The Legend of Molly Johnson never feels like anything but a cinematic experience.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 19, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
Braun and Martin make some interesting choices and craft a gorgeous-looking film on an obviously shoestring budget, but none of that matters when my one wish was for these characters to never see each other again.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 19, 2022
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- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 15, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
That this claustrophobic sci-fi thriller quickly won me over with its early David Cronenberg inspirations only allowed my excitement to increase with each passing minute as I found myself unable to detach from its captivatingly dark, timely pandemic mystery.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 12, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
By separating this film into two parts we really get to understand how alluring Freegard was.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 12, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
Beyond its aesthetic and horror lies a poignant message about second chances.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 8, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
Grashaw’s ability to keep everything moving through that thick air of uncertainty is the film’s best attribute because it does feel like we’ve gone off-track more than once after chapter one (there are three, one for each sibling).- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 4, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
Is the tonal marriage perfect between the over-the-top hijinks about the gross commodification of “wokeness” and melodramatic exposure of the cost those actually fighting must pay as a result? No. In many instances it seems Shephard does want us to pity Danni (Deutch’s performance almost deserves it too once she finds a conscience hiding below her vanity) despite her endgame proving the opposite.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 27, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
The only way this play at “bringing a sense of joy and optimism during a time of great fear and loss” (as she states in her brief, platitude-heavy, 68-word director’s statement) could be more tone-deaf is if she waited to reveal it was set during the first few weeks of the pandemic in 2020 for a third-act rug pull.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 21, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
Mazlo’s graphic design and animation background shines with a sort of elongated montage taking Alice from Beirut’s streets (guided by a woman dressed as the Lebanese flag’s cedar tree) to the diner where she meets Joseph and then through the years of them starting a family.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 21, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
There’s some gnarly imagery that comes once, in Good Madam‘s second half, the supernatural takes over from the historical and characters find themselves falling into the trance of larger, systemic issues plaguing our world for millennia. But the beginning is just as tense and anxiety-inducing in its more normal sense of reality.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 15, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
Both Krige and Eberhardt deliver subtly quiet performances within this atmospherically fragmented pursuit of vengeance, ultimately transforming into agents of change.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 15, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
This is a political film. If Olga’s pursuit of her Olympic dream is often narratively truncated, what it means to be in Switzerland while loved ones remain in Kyiv, risking their lives at the protests, isn’t.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 7, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
Script and production are impeccable, but I can’t say enough about the cast’s dedication to bringing both to life with an electric wit and resonant introspection.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jun 30, 2022
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- Jared Mobarak
Everyone involved does the best with what they’re given, though, perhaps saving The Long Night from being even more forgettable than it already is. The script does none of them any favors by fearing its own mythology and hiding it in a way that makes it seem like it has none.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jun 27, 2022
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