Jessica Kiang
Select another critic »For 750 reviews, this critic has graded:
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56% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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39% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.6 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:
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Positive: 529 out of 750
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Mixed: 182 out of 750
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Negative: 39 out of 750
750
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Jessica Kiang
This is punchy first-person filmmaking, from the point of view of the last person you want to be.- Variety
- Posted Mar 21, 2024
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- Jessica Kiang
A funny, rueful valentine to the fine art of the farewell — the smaller ones that litter our lives and the big final one at the end.- Variety
- Posted Oct 16, 2025
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- Jessica Kiang
Neither switch-your-brain-off-escapist, nor the kind of arthouse filmmaking that makes heavy demands on your time or willpower, Hong’s cinema remains one of the most reliable sources of this particular pleasure.- Variety
- Posted Apr 29, 2024
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- Jessica Kiang
If “All Dirt Roads” perhaps does not connect quite as powerfully as it could on a narrative level, it marks the arrival of an arresting new talent in Raven Jackson, at the very least as the creator of the kind of cinema you do not watch as much as touch and smell and taste.- Variety
- Posted Jan 24, 2023
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- Jessica Kiang
If the hero’s dire situation is a ticking clock, Lojkine’s intelligent and empathetic film places us right alongside him, with each cog of circumstance and each gear of good fortune grinding against him at every turn.- Variety
- Posted May 25, 2024
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- Jessica Kiang
Monge’s deliciously seedy first film is light on originality but heavy on atmospherics: a sleazy, sultry, saxophone-blare echoing down a Parisian metro tunnel at night.- Variety
- Posted May 19, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
Mesen’s delicate yet earthy, thoughtful yet sensual movie never tips its hand as to whether Clara’s abilities are real or imaginary — indeed it makes the line between fact and fantasy seem as nonsensical as it might to a horse — and it pays off in one of those obscurely uplifting endings.- Variety
- Posted Aug 31, 2021
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- Jessica Kiang
After the 140 minutes of “The Sparks Brothers” zip by like a tight half-hour, even the previously uninitiated may well feel like they’ve known Sparks all along – or at least that they should have.- Variety
- Posted Feb 2, 2021
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- Jessica Kiang
A sublimely crafted saga about child soldiers discovering their own hearts of darkness in an unnamed, untamed Latin American wilderness, Monos presents an ugly reality in terms so profoundly paradoxical it becomes surreality: an experience at once jagged and lyrical, brutal and beautiful, angry and abstract, scattered and wholly singular.- Variety
- Posted Sep 29, 2019
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- Jessica Kiang
Rojo is a witheringly provocative examination of temporary moral eclipse becoming permanent moral apocalypse.- Variety
- Posted Jul 9, 2019
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- Jessica Kiang
The humdrum and heartswelling Compartment No. 6 evokes a powerful nostalgia for a type of loneliness we don’t really have any more, and for the type of love that was its cure.- Variety
- Posted Jul 12, 2021
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- Jessica Kiang
It may not be wholly successful, but it certainly is bleakly fascinating to witness a master filmmaker paint so subtle and soothing a portrait of humanity, only to finally, bitterly remind us that there is no soothing nature – human or otherwise – when there’s a bullet in its belly.- Variety
- Posted Sep 6, 2023
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- Jessica Kiang
Partly, the balance between gritty, true-life fidelity and pacy, exciting storytelling is achieved because in Rye, to whom Eric Kress’ warm, compassionate camera clings so doggedly, we have such a sympathetic, human protagonist.- Variety
- Posted Oct 14, 2021
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- Jessica Kiang
Craig reveals himself as perhaps the most generous actor to have inhabited the role. And not only toward the rest of the cast, but toward the very idea of Bond itself. Craig sets Bond free from the prison of forgetfulness that has previously trapped him like a caveman in ice, though the price is steep, and it remains to be seen if future installments can continue to pay it.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 29, 2021
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- Jessica Kiang
Norm Li’s photography perfectly suits the tone, neither romancing the locations of Lu’s life nor making them look condescendingly squalid. And his aesthetic keeps pace with Brendan Mills’ excellent editing.- Variety
- Posted Jan 14, 2026
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- Jessica Kiang
Quite possibly brilliant, and very definitely all but unbearable, Ahed’s Knee is filmmaking as hostage-taking. If such language seems charged, this is Nadav Lapid: All language is charged.- Variety
- Posted Jul 11, 2021
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- Jessica Kiang
If its rueful, midlife nostalgia doesn’t carry quite the same current of vibrant, urgent empathy as “20th Century Women” or “Beginners,” the small, polished pebbles of wisdom it unearths are still a pleasure to observe as they’re sent skimming across the surface of a delicate, compassionate film.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 19, 2021
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- Jessica Kiang
As a magnificently unlovable art-house object, El Conde is perhaps best approached as a challenge: Run the gauntlet if you dare, and if, at the other end, you emerge dazed and disturbed rather than straightforwardly entertained, perhaps those are just the splinters you get when you try to stake a vampire.- Variety
- Posted Aug 31, 2023
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- Jessica Kiang
First Love may be a fluffier, more eager-to-please bauble than Miike’s more challengingly outré titles, but like the cutesy mechanical toy puppy that turns up yapping in the middle of the film, it is wired to explode, and it is a blast.- Variety
- Posted May 31, 2019
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- Jessica Kiang
It is a relevant, relatable and rewarding snapshot of how a society grows crookedly around its unresolved secrets, in the same way that a marriage can.- Variety
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- Jessica Kiang
With the actors so convincing in their roles and with Xin especially able to command the screen despite the often miserable un-glamor of her surroundings, the film becomes a rich portrait of a connection that was once so tender and now just revolves in a slowly decaying orbit around the broken axis of his resentment and her guilt.- Variety
- Posted Sep 10, 2025
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- Jessica Kiang
While Santoalla is a small story, its poignancy resonates, like an echo finding its way through the peaks and valleys of this windswept, eternal landscape.- Variety
- Posted Jul 26, 2017
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- Jessica Kiang
The film gradually thaws out the stark, frozen mystery at its heart, but the warm-blooded, breathing truth of Linda’s life is no less tragic than that of her cold death.- Variety
- Posted Mar 31, 2017
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- Jessica Kiang
Such wild zigzags in tone — between bumbling physical comedy and lightly stinging satirical observation, between heartbreaking vulnerability and bursts of gleefully vicious, slickly choreographed violence — ought not to work at all. And yet they do, thanks to Jensen’s calm, slightly wry command of the story, and a cast that have all understood the assignment, even when their respective assignments are all quite different.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 17, 2021
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- Jessica Kiang
Inshallah a Boy moves like a sleek thriller, but is full of the unsolved mysteries and dangling question marks of real life.- Variety
- Posted Dec 11, 2023
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- Variety
- Posted Mar 5, 2021
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- Jessica Kiang
It requires a degree of commitment on the part of the viewer to join the sparsely placed dots of Glavonić’s harshly intelligent and uncompromisingly spare story, especially when the picture they form is so harrowing. But the elements that frustrate can also devastate.- Variety
- Posted Aug 28, 2019
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- Jessica Kiang
None of this would work at all if it weren’t pinned to the unselfconscious gaze of Fuki (delightful newcomer Yui Suzuki), 11 years old and already an original.- Variety
- Posted May 20, 2025
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- Jessica Kiang
With so many moving parts, it’s hard to isolate just one reason why Ben Hania’s film — a vast improvement on her terminally uneven, unexpectedly Oscar-nominated “The Man Who Sold His Skin” — should prove so gripping.- Variety
- Posted May 22, 2023
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- Jessica Kiang
R.M.N. is a slow-motion snapshot of a deeply riven community flying apart in all directions, as though some bomb, detonated years or perhaps even centuries ago, has never stopped exploding.- Variety
- Posted May 23, 2022
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