Jessica Kiang
Select another critic »For 746 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: 526 out of 746
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Mixed: 181 out of 746
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Negative: 39 out of 746
746
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Jessica Kiang
It is certainly too long and too messy, too indulgent in some parts and too starved in others to be an unqualified success. But the surprise of it is that there are times, like the inspired first act, when it really does work, when it seems to have a kind of manic energy, a sheer joy at existing, which certainly makes it a far more engaging picture than Gilliam’s last.- The Playlist
- Posted May 18, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
The chief value of the impassioned but slightly flavorless At War is that it gives Lindon another opportunity to wear the undersung virtue of ordinary, rough-hewn decency the way a superhero might wear a cape.- Variety
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
With Under the Silver Lake Mitchell saw all the lights on the long highway to success turn green, and in the full flush of all that indulged freedom, put the top down, turned up the radio and roared off into the LA evening, forgetting that he didn’t have anywhere to go.- The Playlist
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
Perhaps The House That Jack Built is the kind of film you make when you fervently want someone to stop you, to save you from yourself and the demons of your worst nature. Perhaps, this time, we should oblige.- The Playlist
- Posted May 16, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
BlacKkKlansman has many virtues, but it is also a strange kind of messy, in which the performances from both Washington and Driver are so laid back as to feel curiously low-energy at times.- The Playlist
- Posted May 16, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
Ortega shows more interest in the how than the why. He mines the scenes of violence for black comedy, rendering the bloodletting anticlimactic and the victims largely irrelevant, and Ferro’s baby-faced, bright eyed disingenuity suits that agenda perfectly.- Variety
- Posted May 14, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
This is exhaustingly exhibitionist cinema, that wants to be looked at for the sake of being looked at — for the crispness of its moves, not the complexity of its concepts, and that can get wearying after a while.- The Playlist
- Posted May 14, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
There are wit and wisdom and a kind of “Before Sunrise” wistfulness in this slight little film, and it’s shot through with an unobtrusively lyrical affection for being young and aimless in even the less obviously lovely quarters of lovely Lisbon.- The Playlist
- Posted May 10, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
Farhadi’s genius is to be able to take the most ordinary of situations (say, a separation) and turn it into the stuff of gripping sociological drama. But largely, this time out, he’s rather done the reverse: given a gripping premise and a game cast he has engineered perhaps his most ordinary film.- The Playlist
- Posted May 9, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
Modest though her debut is, Metelius has achieved a fine, beguiling balance. The tone is kept light and bittersweet, so she’s hardly making any claim to great importance or originality in her narrative. But nor does she apologize for the story’s slightness, displaying a sincere and persuasive confidence that makes it worth telling nonetheless.- The Playlist
- Posted May 6, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
Yeksan’s portrait of generational malaise and middle-class dissociation is deceptively loose in execution for a film so dense with allegorical potential. Yet, like the occasional sparkle of amusement in Selim’s eye, it is enlivened by a finely tuned sense of the ridiculous, and an ending that improbably offers up the oddest cocktail of optimism with which to toast the oncoming End Times.- The Playlist
- Posted May 6, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
However much fun the film’s high points may afford, there is also something faintly depressing about seeing a once-inventive filmmaker plunder his own legacy for easy props.- Variety
- Posted May 4, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
“Bride” is remarkable for how honestly it earns every tiny tick of pleasure it gives — for it gives many.- The Playlist
- Posted May 3, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
One of the most undersung and most potent pleasures of genre cinema is the excuse it has given us, time and again, to watch attractive people fall in love with each other, and if you’re in a romantic frame of mind, Racer and the Jailbird delivers so wholly on that front that it goes a fair way toward compensating for the film’s deficiencies elsewhere.- The Playlist
- Posted May 2, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
While Vitali is frank about the nature of his demanding and subservient relationship to the man, his warmhearted, dazzled, Everest-high respect for Kubrick’s talent remains undimmed even now. It is truly inspiring and touching just how little bitterness Vitali has in him, and it stems from his having no regrets over a life dedicated to something he believes in with utterly selfless purity.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 30, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
The shock feels less than shocking and the awe less than awesome in Rob Reiner’s righteously motivated but clunkily executed exposé of media manipulation in the run-up to the Iraq War.- Variety
- Posted Apr 26, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
It’s to the film’s credit that it creates a sense of high-stakes peril despite us knowing the rough outcome from the get-go, and largely without simplifying its moral dilemmas into straightforward choices between heroism and villainy.- Variety
- Posted Apr 25, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
There’s a storybook complacency to Garbarski’s filmmaking (indeed the literal translation of the German title is “Once Upon a Time in Germany”) that gives us the impression that all this is snow-globe history, put away behind glass on a shelf somewhere.- Variety
- Posted Apr 13, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
Handsomely shot, evocatively designed, solidly cast and terribly daft, it also presents your friendly neighborhood reviewer with something of a challenge. With what seems like almost premeditated skill, it saves its worst instincts for the backend of its convoluted and barely credible narrative, a good arm-and-a-half’s-length beyond the impassible “spoiler wall.”- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 12, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
Chabot’s film is not “The Garden,” but The Gardener and as a portrait of the man behind Quatre Vents, unlike the gorgeous flora, it never blossoms.- Variety
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
This is a merciless film, and whether the process of teasing its meaning out for yourself feels like a punishment or a reward will depend entirely on your patience and your point of view.- Variety
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
Sweet Country is unmistakably a western in iconography and spare, taciturn tone, but it is also an incendiary slave narrative, in which the poetry of the filmmaking can barely contain a simmering fury and disgust at this most shameful of human institutions.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 2, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
What on paper might be a standard sporting bio-doc, largely relevant only to tennis aficionados or fans of John McEnroe at the height of his powers, instead becomes a lovely meditation on time and movement, dedication and obsession, image and perception.- Variety
- Posted Mar 27, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
With writing that’s nowhere near as sharp as the tailoring, and which adorns a trite Cinderella story that stuffs the fabulously unconventional De Palma into a stiflingly conventional corset, Madame is less a baroque masterpiece than a subpar reproduction in a gaudy frame.- Variety
- Posted Mar 22, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
If you like your metaphors thuddingly literal (and literally thudding, with the whole final act unfolding to the grunting rhythm of a man bashing away at a cliff face with a mallet), the Iranian director’s “Monte” will prove a treat. The rest of us may find ourselves wondering, like the biblically unfortunate central character, just what we’ve done to deserve this. The film at least looks extraordinary.- Variety
- Posted Mar 20, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
The story Sealey tells is slender, dissociative and inward-looking to the point of self-indulgence at times. But Brockis, with her stubborn jawline, two-tone shock of hair and striking heterochromatic eyes, is a powerful presence.- Variety
- Posted Mar 19, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
A distinct air of staleness permeates the whole enterprise — even the palette is brown as an old biscuit, and Rodrigo Amarante’s minimal score is so politely low in the mix that it’s hardly even there.- Variety
- Posted Feb 23, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
Topicality is not mandatory, and it’s clear the agenda here is for salacious genre thrills rather than anything deeper or more profound, but when the film’s form is such an embrace of modernity, it feels like cognitive dissonance to have the story skew so old-fashioned.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 21, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
It’s having the ordinary in such close proximity to the outlandish that makes November so uncanny. And it’s rooting the bizarre behaviors of its characters in such understandable motivations (usually greed) that makes it so unexpectedly funny and scabrously relatable.- Variety
- Posted Feb 19, 2018
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- Jessica Kiang
Monster Hunt 2 is so perfectly good-natured and so utterly nonsensical that it makes not-thinking-about-it basically an act of self-preservation, for which, bless its bouncing, gurgling, flolloping heart.- Variety
- Posted Feb 18, 2018
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