Jessica Kiang
Select another critic »For 746 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
56% higher than the average critic
-
5% same as the average critic
-
39% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.5 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jessica Kiang's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 71 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Birds of Passage | |
| Lowest review score: | After We Collided | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 526 out of 746
-
Mixed: 181 out of 746
-
Negative: 39 out of 746
746
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- Jessica Kiang
whether because of its personal nature, its occasional ferocity, its unusually dark undercurrents, its audacious defiance of expectation and explanation or Kim Min-hee’s essential performance, On The Beach At Night Alone feels like it will be exceptional even for longtime diehard Hong fans.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 17, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
The superb Vega’s steady, liquid, fathomless gaze is so direct that we come to understand that behind it, behind the barricade of defenses she’s built up against an unfriendly world, she is no enigma at all: she is completely known to herself.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 17, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
If the slender paradox at the heart of the film is that the thing that connects us most is the difficulty of connection, The Human Surge is a victim of its own effectiveness: It’s rigorous, rarefied, and utterly remote.- Variety
- Posted Feb 9, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
For all its flaws, or rather for all the magnitude of its one massive flaw, it is more sincere than arch, and more earnest, certainly in its desire to get its makers onto the radar, than glib.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 8, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
13 Minutes is an elegant, expensive-looking, respectful history lesson that finds just enough interesting texture in terms of the religious, social, moral, and personal circumstances that led to the creation of this rogue ideologue, to save it from becoming dry.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 7, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
It’s maybe Franco’s best-crafted film to date, and also maybe his dullest.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 3, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
The film might not have quite learned how to communicate visually rather than verbally, but the words are enticing ones and Sean Price Williams‘ serene, airy cinematography is fluid and varied enough that it never feels stagebound.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 2, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Entertaining though it is in parts, it can’t really be said to mark any particular growth for McDonagh as a filmmaker, being both less angry and more cynical that the brooding "Calvary" and consequently less memorable and relevant too.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 31, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Gould and Zwann’s film runs along perhaps too familiar formal lines to have many tricks up its sleeve.... Yet that does not rob the inevitable meeting of its simple, sweet power, and the gentle revelations, mellowed with time, that punctuate the excited chatter are truly moving.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 17, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
The subtlety of [Tatiana Huezo‘s] approach interlaces ideas, resonances and emotions in ever-shifting, eternally edifying ways. And it ultimately promotes the film from human interest journalism to a grand work of socio-political critique and a quietly radical remodeling of familiar documentary formats.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 16, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
There is always something of value in the sincere recreation of ordinary heroism. And Perez’ film does sincere if ordinary justice to the idea that where there is a will for it, resistance can find a way, be it so small as to be postcard-sized.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 12, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
It starts out less not-good than it ends up, to be fair, and for the majority of its running time, it’s engaging enough. Its chief issue in these parts seems to be that the director isn’t super sure if he’s making an action thriller with apocalyptic overtones, a family drama, or a character portrait/performance showcase, so the tone is all over the place.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 12, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Uneven though it is, and downright shaggy at times, Prevenge is valuable in that it plots so unexpected an expectant-mother story — one in which pregnancy is actually ultimately minimized in terms of its impact on the story.- The Playlist
- Posted Nov 18, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Despite all the craft and care it seems just slightly deflating that Fire at Sea can elicit a relatively complacent reaction when it is such a thoughtful, deeply-felt and exquisitely observed film, set right in the eye of a raging storm.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 20, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Zlotowski has turned in a beguiling film that impresses as much for its oddly specific and well-researched setting (the ragtag community of lower-grade workers at a nuclear power plant), as for the romance, and maintains impressive narrative and tonal control right up until an ending that falters just at the final hurdle.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 18, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Rather than use his trademark raw style to expose and eviscerate social injustice, here Escalante puts it in service of a kind of cautionary fable about both the healing power of sex and the harming power of sexual hypocrisy, and he uses a tentacled alien to do it.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 17, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Jackie is what happens when two distinct sensibilities — the Goliath of the Hollywood prestige pic and the David of Pablo Larraín’s playful, idiosyncratic intelligence — throw down.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 16, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Very well-made, very sweet-natured and very, very familiar: how strange that Philippe Falardeau‘s The Bleeder, a based-in-truth film about pretty much the definition of a confrontational sport —boxing— should feel cosy as a down comforter from beginning to end.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 14, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
The Age of Shadows has no pretensions to being a particularly deep or politically resonant piece of filmmaking. Its more that Kim Jee-woon has found in this era and this milieu the perfect inspiration for a blisteringly entertaining and exquisite genre exercise, one that may not be recognised as such only because we we have never expected genre films to be this good.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 13, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
The very beauty of the pictures, and the exhausting knowledge of how much effort and care went into each peculiar creature, each liquidly expanding nebula, each belching mud spring, contributes to a kind of wonder fatigue, and soon it feels a little like you’ve slipped into a lukewarm bath of imagery. It’s soothing, comfortable, blood-temperature and it doesn’t quicken your pulse one iota or inspire a single thought in your mind that you haven’t had a hundred times before.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 7, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
The perils of the broader-canvas follow-up to the sleek and economical indie debut are writ large: this is “Difficult Second Album: The Movie.”- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 6, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
This is a virtuosic piece of filmmaking art that also happens to be almost unbearably moving. Actually, there is no “almost.”- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 5, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Along with screenwriters Robert Schenkkan and Andrew Knight, Gibson, whose lack of directorial subtlety but skill with action both reach an apex here, is not content to tell the true story of Desmond Doss and his unshakeable, courage-giving faith. He wants to convince us that his faith was, in fact, the truth.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 4, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Ford’s attempt to synthesize the two halves of his film into a coherent whole is what sells it all short.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 2, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Arrival, the shimmering apex of Villeneuve’s run of form that started back in 2010 with “Incendies,” calmly, unfussily and with superb craft, thinks its way out of the black hole that tends to open up when ideas like time travel, alien contact and the next phase of human evolution are bandied about.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 1, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
La La Land is a film you simply never want to stop watching. It has wisdom and joy and sadness and such magic, from the evocative power of music to the transportative power of movies.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 31, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Though he gets fine performances from many quarters...the film is scuppered by an approach that sees it build on the bones of the novel without ever quite animating its heart.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 28, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Containing not one single jump scare, but building a disquieting atmosphere of dread that leads us to make some brilliantly gruesome inferences, it’s a classy take on the often trashy pregnancy horror category, with a subtle social critique underlying its neo-gothic texture.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 27, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Despite presenting an environment enriched to weapons-grade plutonium levels with potential for interpersonal drama, Vinterberg can’t seem to find any.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 25, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
A true blue dark comedy that isn’t so concerned with its darkness that it forgets to be laugh-out-loud silly at times too, “In Order of Disappearance” is a bitter, bloody treat for the black of heart.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 6, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Your mileage will vary on Genius, depending on where you place Law’s performance on the irritating/entertaining spectrum and your tolerance for somewhat formulaic tales of creative ego and “The Price of Fame.”- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
After the Storm is a film that invites you in, and clears a space for you at the dinner table while you shuck off your shoes in the hallway.- The Playlist
- Posted May 26, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
His new film Zero Days may ostensibly be an investigation of the 2010 malware worm known as Stuxnet, but over its swift-moving 116-minute runtime, Gibney does a much broader and more important job: relating the rather airless, abstract concepts of cyber-terrorism and internet espionage to their real-world consequences.- The Playlist
- Posted May 24, 2016
- Read full review
-
- The Playlist
- Posted May 23, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Even within Schrader’s own back catalogue, Dog Eat Dog feels like a lukewarm retread of elements he has achieved, as a writer and director, much better before. It’s just that here they’re mashed together gracelessly, with a kind of bullying undercurrent, as though designed to get a rise out of you, just so it can deliver two for flinching.- The Playlist
- Posted May 22, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
An excoriating, gripping, intricately plotted morality play, Mungiu’s film is less linear, more circular or spiral-shaped than his previous Cannes titles...but it is no less rigorous and possibly even more eviscerating and critical of Romanian society, because it offers its critique across such a broad canvas.- The Playlist
- Posted May 21, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
The list of the film’s transgressions against the culturally acceptable is almost gratuitously long. But the spine of self-aware intelligence that runs through even its most grotesque, exploitative, and offensive twists, and the basically incredible, irreplaceable central performance from Isabelle Huppert, make this queasily hilarious mass of contradictions just about cohere.- The Playlist
- Posted May 21, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
It’s less a convincing, involving narrative than an episodic picaresque that rambles loose-jointedly from absurdist encounter to vaguely fable-like incident.- The Playlist
- Posted May 21, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Puiu scoops up storylines and arguments and revelations armful by messy armful and the inexplicably titled “Sieranevada” becomes by turns pit-of-stomach-sad, flight-of-fancy funny and pin-in-heart moving. And never less than wincingly true in its deadpan acknowledgement of the beautiful absurdity of family life.- The Playlist
- Posted May 21, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Though it is dense in allusion and rich in texture, there are choices he makes that ultimately pull The Salesman back from the greatness, and the engulfing universality of his best work. It is as compelling as anything Farhadi has ever made, but it’s also somehow smaller.- The Playlist
- Posted May 21, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
An unfeasibly charming film full of little wisdoms and quiet comforts where we might expect to find provocations, its only deception is that it is so much richer than it seems at first glance.- The Playlist
- Posted May 21, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
A dexterous, mischievous, almost incomprehensibly intelligent film that has such invention packed into every frame that the only real danger is overload, Neruda works most thrillingly as an effusive love letter to the very concept of fiction and all the ways it can set you free, written in lyrical but staccato meter, perhaps with a rose between the teeth.- The Playlist
- Posted May 21, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
An intensely pleasurable, lavishly shot dessert tray of utter hokum, The Handmaiden is a prime example of why we should be glad that there’s someone out there still invested in the overwrought Gothic melodrama, and that that person is Park Chan-wook.- The Playlist
- Posted May 21, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Of course, Cotillard is your first call if you want an actress to suffer exquisitely, but the issue is her character Gabrielle is essentially a nightmare of self-involvement, whose emotional torture is very difficult to get invested in since she herself has already bought all the shares.- Variety
- Posted May 20, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Having recruited as fine a cast of French-speaking thesps as has ever been assembled, and marshalled a strong behind-the-camera team, Dolan’s usually exuberant egotism is here taken so seriously that what we’re left with is a shrieking bore, without a single character worth rooting for, least of all the puddle of maudlin self-pity at its center.- The Playlist
- Posted May 20, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Personal Shopper is a mess — not an uninteresting one, and better that than a staid, unadventurous bore, but a mess nonetheless.- The Playlist
- Posted May 20, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
It is indulgent in its length and relative plotlessness, though there’s no point at which the bravado of Arnold’s filmmaking, Lane’s riveting performance or Ryan’s stunning Polaroid-shaped lensing ever flag.- The Playlist
- Posted May 20, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
As polished a film in terms of craft and performance as Nichols has ever made, the director’s trademark considered intelligence shows itself in how subtly it reworks and refreshes the tired conceits of the historical biopic, while still remaining a conventionally appealing and, yes, Oscar-y example of the genre.- The Playlist
- Posted May 20, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Spectacular, gross and delicious (so unsavory it’s almost sweet), the film is more proof of Refn’s mastery of his trash aesthetic and more fun than anything this indulgent and empty-headed has any right to be.- The Playlist
- Posted May 20, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
The somewhat drab aesthetic and almost vanishingly understated performance style dull the potential pleasures of a good old-fashioned whodunnit to roughly the luminosity of an above-average feature-length episode of a TV procedural.- The Playlist
- Posted May 19, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Every family is its own country with culture and customs and embarrassments that seem alien beyond its borders, but the genius of Maren Ade‘s brilliantly funny and slyly crushing Toni Erdmann is that it makes the utterly foreign nation of its central father/daughter relationship feel so much like home.- The Playlist
- Posted May 19, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
If the resulting film, Julieta feels neither wholly Munro nor typically Almodovar in final execution, there is still a very compelling energy given out by the collision.- The Playlist
- Posted May 17, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Not wondrous enough to be likened to a ghost, "Journey to the Shore" is the corpse of a film: lifeless, bloodless, insensate.- The Playlist
- Posted May 17, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
What little shock of the new the film can provide us with comes from the honeyed cinematography by Vittorio Storaro which uses silhouettes, graphic compositions and glowing closeups in an often genuinely breathtaking manner. But it also comes from the performances.- The Playlist
- Posted May 11, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Thomsen builds a fascinating film around a fascinating man, but never, despite his evident deep affection for him, allows it to fall into hagiography.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 28, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Uplifting in a tiny, understated and very authentic way, Sworn Virgin shows us gently how its possible to be living in exile in the world you know best, and how it's possible to come home to a place you've never been before.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 21, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Perhaps most impressive is how, despite the nostalgia inherent in this kind of endeavor, "Sleeping Giant" never sentimentalizes its story, and never compromises on the essentially bleak idea that you can be transformed from a carefree child shading your eyes from the glare of a huge, wide future to a scarred and haunted young adult in a single moment.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 20, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
For a movie that is all about accumulation, it adds up to very little, and for a story all about connectedness, 11 minutes, intermittently enjoyable though it may be, never connects.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 7, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
It's an overwrought, stagey muddle that suggests that Davies, ever a-quiver on the extreme high end of the sensitivity meter anyway, has quivered right off it and plunged into the depths of bathos.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 24, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Structured as a low-key chase movie, unfolding with the dark urgency of a conspiracy thriller, living mostly not in your heart or even your mind but in the hairs on the back of your neck, "Midnight Special" actually emerges most resonantly as an almost mournful ode, or maybe a psalm, to the primal instincts of fatherhood.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 12, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
It's an absorbing, even thrilling head trip. It is a Heart-of-Darkness voyage of discovery. It is a lament for all the lost plants and peoples of the world.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 7, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
A bold, blunt, yet clinically intelligent film that provokes as much for its dark humor as for its righteous outrage, it's all at once a gripping thriller, an incendiary social critique and a mordant moral fable.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 10, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Lovely to look at, charmingly played throughout, and with a sense of fun that is more playful than subversive, The Brand New Testament is a bouncy treat: not so much heresy as whimsy, with a smooth matte finish and a mischievous grin.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 10, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
It promises a minute character study, but Franny, though embodied by a game Gere who in all fairness does visit places in his performance we have rarely seen him even stop by before, is less a person than a collection of quirks.- The Playlist
- Posted Nov 22, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Using its characters' memories, loyalties and resentments as vehicles, Return to Ithaca gently expands our understanding of life within a society that, in contrast to our own, did not even pretend to cultivate the idea that its citizens were free.- The Playlist
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Seidl uses the peculiar relationship of Austrians to their basements as a way to pick away at the cracks between our public and our most private selves. But it's an idea that is elevated further by his rigorous eye for composition and cinematographic portraiture that makes the even the most bizarre images beautiful, and fashions the film, which could feel very fragmented in that it jumps from subject to subject and back again, into a deeply engrossing whole.- The Playlist
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
A highly polished film that belies the soap opera melodrama of its plotline by having the twists and turns spring directly from well-observed human behavior, Stone's The Daughter is a quiet, immensely affecting triumph.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 25, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
The problems run far deeper than craft — it is simply a film that has no reason to be made, a story without point or insight or drive.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
If ‘Dying’‘s main issue was a surfeit of ideas, ’Sound’ feels like it suffers from a paucity.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
For the most part an assured film, confident in both the drama and the truth of the scenario it observes, this ground-level view of the immigrant experience feels both pinpoint specific and all too representative of the obstacles and attitudes that face so many illegals, in so many parts of the world.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 21, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Aptly named and drolly executed, leading to a transcendently funny, endearing and unexpected finale, The Treasure confirms Corneliu Porumboiu as the joker in the Romanian New Wave pack.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 9, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Jessica Kiang
Hitchcock is essential; Truffaut is essential; the book is essential; Kent Jones' Hitchcock/Truffaut is not quite so, but it's a very enjoyable appendix.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 2, 2015
- Read full review