Jason Bailey
Select another critic »For 156 reviews, this critic has graded:
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46% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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51% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jason Bailey's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | If Beale Street Could Talk | |
| Lowest review score: | Sextuplets | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 93 out of 156
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Mixed: 41 out of 156
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Negative: 22 out of 156
156
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Jason Bailey
Johnson and Penn’s connection is genuine, and there’s an awful lot to like here. Shame about that title.- The Playlist
- Posted May 30, 2024
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- Jason Bailey
It is a thoughtful and intelligent film, and it finds a gifted actor doing some very tricky things quite well.- The Playlist
- Posted May 10, 2024
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- Jason Bailey
Mortensen is playing with iconography here, so it’s less about that destination than the journey — and he finds the right, delicate, evocative note to conclude on and holds it exactly as long as he should. “The Dead Don’t Hurt” isn’t your typical revenge Western, but audiences willing to stick with it will find a picture rendered with grace, patience, and artistry.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 25, 2024
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- Jason Bailey
"Rather” is ultimately a valentine, which is fine. But as such, it’s not as tough on Dan Rather as he would’ve been to such a subject himself.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 23, 2024
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- Jason Bailey
First Time Female Director is a tremendous disappointment because Peretti is such a gifted performer; it’s understandable to go in pulling for her (this viewer certainly did), but those layers of goodwill just peel away as scene after scene simply does not work. Too much of what she’s assembled is just half-hearted cringe comedy—much of it without the comedy half of the equation.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 22, 2024
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- Jason Bailey
What is truly, and thrillingly, new here is Morris’s thematic interest. The deeper he goes into the rabbit hole with Cornwall, the more his true subject becomes apparent, as the picture becomes a penetrating investigation of the idea that great artists freely use fiction to work through the very real pain of their own lives—even in work that’s not explicitly or even transparently autobiographical.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 11, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
Lee knows exactly how it wants to look, yet it has little that’s new or interesting to say.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 10, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
Kendrick leans more into the dark comedy and general dread of the situation, winding the picture tighter the deeper she goes, and her work here is ambitious and impressive.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 10, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
Hamm makes himself look bland, which is no small accomplishment. But he’s also smothering much of what makes him an exciting actor.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 24, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
He led a fascinating, complicated, often contradictory life, and Rock Hudson: All That Heaven Allowed does it justice.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 13, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
Above all, I Used to Be Funny is a fine showcase for Sennott’s considerable gifts.- The Playlist
- Posted May 2, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
You can see the conflicts and dramatic beats coming from a mile away, and the corniness of the ending is absolutely immeasurable. It’s an inoffensive and even likable picture, but not a particularly compelling one.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 31, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
It’s about as well-acted and enjoyable a version of this particular thing as you’re likely to find.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 18, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
Johnson and Kendrick are just terrific together — ample chemistry, excellent comic byplay — and the sense of play, the feeling of one-upmanship in their scenes together, immediately cranks the picture up a notch.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 17, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
The movie’s practical and special effects are a rogues’ gallery of gougings, stabbings, shavings, and scalpings; those who like to have their stomachs turned will find much to cheer about. But is it actually scary – suspenseful, tense, trafficking in more than the cheap shock of a jump scare or vivid effect? Not really, no.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 16, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
Once you get on this one’s wavelength, it’s wildly funny and delightfully subversive.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 13, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
There’s a curious shortage of honest-to-goodness laughs in Finley’s script; the humor is strained, and it doesn’t really land as science-fiction either. ... “Landscape with Invisible Hand” is, at best, an ambitious failure.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
If we’re being honest, Carney isn’t breaking new ground here, and I keep waiting for him to make a movie that will finally fully exhaust his Whole Thing. But Flora and Son is not that movie.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 24, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
It’s genuinely thrilling to watch a filmmaker with a specific voice and oddball style taking genuine risks, and the way she successfully navigates these tonal transitions, how she cuts the cynicism with sincerity and vice versa – well, it’s kind of miracle.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 24, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
The new film most directly recalls “Enough Said,” Louis-Dreyfus and Holfocener’s collaboration of a decade ago, which also concerned the Louis-Dreyfus character hearing things she shouldn’t. This film doesn’t quite measure up to that one — Jeffrey Waldon’s cinematography is oddly murky, and Menzies can’t provide the strong counterpoint James Gandolfini did. But it’s nevertheless smart, warm, and very, very funny.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 23, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
Barthes’ screenplay is clean; for the most part, it’s brainy but not didactic, and thoughtful but not dull.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 23, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
This is a movie that barely speaks above a whisper, even when its characters are howling in pain inside.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 22, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
Domont’s script just turns into a series of victories, defeats, increasingly distracting narrative leaps, and ultimately silly turns of tone that seem designed to provoke whoops and sneers and cheers.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 22, 2023
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- Jason Bailey
“Walls” is more like a Wikipedia entry— the hyperlinked names appear, and the key events are noted, but there’s not much in the way of genuine insight.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 22, 2022
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- Jason Bailey
If nothing else, Babylon is a giant swing, a three-plus hour orgy (sometimes literally) of sex, drugs, and cinema, a respected young artist reaching for a profound statement about art and commerce and America. He misses it by a country mile, but hey, he sure does take that swing.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 16, 2022
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- Jason Bailey
Return to Seoul begins as an intimately off-the-cuff stranger-in-strange-land story and becomes a sprawling epic of personal discovery. It’s one of the best films of the year.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 7, 2022
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- Jason Bailey
The film’s key asset is Johansen, and “Personality Crisis” pulls off the neat trick of serving as an introduction for us newbies while providing new insights and footage for the fans – the latter primarily in the form of the mellow concert footage.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 25, 2022
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- Jason Bailey
A joyless, glacially paced compendium of interchangeable scenes of people floating around in their goofy masks and capes, tossing clichéd dialogue and CG lightning bolts, and punching each other into buildings.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 18, 2022
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- Jason Bailey
The pace drags in the home stretch a bit, and the laughs dry up considerably. None of this matters much. George and Julia spark and sparkle, which is what the trailers promise, and it’s what the movie delivers.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 17, 2022
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- Jason Bailey
And the score, again by Carpenter, his son Cody Carpenter, and Daniel Davies, is another banger, often lapping the action onscreen for mood and dread. It almost becomes a provocation, forcing us to long for more active involvement by Carpenter, a filmmaker whose skill and restraint frankly puts Green to shame. Who knows if Halloween Ends will actually conclude the slasher series (let’s not forget that “Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter” was the fourth of twelve installments). But I’ll say this: even as a fan of the franchise, when the title came up at the end of Halloween Ends, I found myself hoping to God they weren’t kidding.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 13, 2022
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