Jonathan Romney
Select another critic »For 296 reviews, this critic has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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1% same as the average critic
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45% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 7 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jonathan Romney's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 73 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Other Side of the Wind | |
| Lowest review score: | Woodshock | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 217 out of 296
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Mixed: 75 out of 296
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Negative: 4 out of 296
296
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Jonathan Romney
Muntean leads us into a playfully caustic realm of social satire, as his characters find themselves in unknown territory without either GPS or a clear moral compass.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 22, 2022
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- Jonathan Romney
Some small-scale but surprising formal twists, and much playfulness, will keep his admirers happy.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 18, 2022
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- Jonathan Romney
Michael Thomas’ imposing performance will be the hook for a film that, while executed with Seidl’s typical steely control, might strike his followers as being a touch too familiar – while non-adepts will find its darker dimensions altogether too bleak for comfort.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 16, 2022
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- Jonathan Romney
Both homage and critique, Peter von Kant astutely gets under the skin of the lesbian-themed original, ekes out new resonances and proves both authentically Fassbinderian and altogether Ozonesque in its ironic sensibilities.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 16, 2022
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- Jonathan Romney
The film unpacks few surprises, although Argentophiles may applaud a ludicrous and copiously gory climax.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 15, 2022
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- Jonathan Romney
Some viewers may find it hard to credit the emotional extremes on display here, which seem more to do with the codes of French psychological drama than with the way people might actually behave in real relationships. Indeed, Binoche has not always convinced in conventional terms when playing women in a psychosexual fluster. Nevertheless, it’s something that she specialises in, and she pushes that register a lot further here – and far more compellingly - than in Denis’s Sunshine.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 15, 2022
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- Jonathan Romney
Gerbase’s insightful, quietly unsettling picture may, right now, be too close to the bone to attract viewers desperate for hard times distraction; but it deserves exposure, and should attract niche sales both on the strength of newsworthiness and on its considerable cinematic achievement.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 10, 2022
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- Jonathan Romney
The film plays with and deconstructs the familiar repertoire of Diana myths and images, to offer an empathetic, intelligent insight into the prison of fame and privilege, with Kristen Stewart offering a lead performance that is brittle, tender, sometimes playful and not a little uncanny.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 8, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
Working with Carbunariu, Jude offers a spare, visually striking evocation of the methods of Ceausescu’s secret police, the Securitate, in its pursuit and punishment of a young dissident.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 8, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
Rather like the butterfly wings that are its central metaphor, Son of Monarchs is deceptively fragile-seeming, yet robust, structurally complex and vibrantly hued.- Screen Daily
- Posted Oct 14, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
The film derives a magnetic continuity, and an unsettling range of dynamics, from Haque Badhon’s performance- Screen Daily
- Posted Oct 13, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
There’s plenty to gawk at, and to argue over, in this episode - yet No Time To Die is oddly lacking in pleasure or real wit.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 28, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
A promising and emotionally mature romantic drama from British writer-director Harry Wootliff.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 18, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
Essentially a frothy bagatelle, and sometimes overworking the slightest of jokes, nevertheless this lively, sleekly executed farce from the Argentinian makers of black comedy The Distinguished Citizen offers comic and visual pleasures alike, plus crisp acting from its lead trio.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
La Caja is a canny blend of detective story, political drama and rites of passage vignette, and is the sort of film that comes across as so simple and direct that it’s easy to miss how meticulously conceived and constructed it is.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
A powerful and troubling drama about the Stalin era. ... This is a film to revel in, and to argue about – and for some, no doubt, to recoil from – but it’s one of the most original works of the year, and a stand-out of what is proving a rich spell in Russian cinema.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
Provocative Italian feature Bad Tales is one of those films that aren’t afraid to confront you with the grimmest aspects of the human condition, but yet leave you feeling strangely exalted by the sheer cinematic invention involved.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 14, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
An all-star cast and some showstoppingly horrible hair can’t save Ridley Scott’s medieval epic.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 10, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
Forty years after John Carpenter made the defining slasher movie, director David Gordon Green has made a creditable stab, as it were, at reanimating the title.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 8, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
The boisterousness remains, as does the unreconstructed maleness that has often been a jarring mannerism in his work. But new intimacy also yields a lightness and tenderness that are a welcome addition to Sorrentino’s palette.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
If The Power Of The Dog isn’t the absolute killer coup that Campionites might have hoped, this is her most thoroughly conceived, consistently involving drama for years: taken all in all, pretty much the full visual, dramatic and, indeed sonic package.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
What gives the film a force that balances out the delicacy is a commanding, charismatic lead by Wendy Chinchilla Araya, best known as a dancer, whose highly physical presence in turn evokes Clara’s sensitivity, isolation, vulnerability, fury and – despite the pressure to keep it hidden – powerful sexuality.- Screen Daily
- Posted Aug 31, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
In all fairness, the film is hard to enjoy, not least because its handful of intriguing ideas are so self-indulgently gussied up with ostentatious visual execution.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 29, 2021
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- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 23, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
Paris is more than just a setting here, but absolutely defines the way that the characters live and connect, the rhythms and pressures of their existence.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 17, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
This satire about media, emotional alienation and – need it be said? – the state of the nation makes its point quickly and forcefully before going on to make it again and again, with different modulations, for over two hours. It’s a shame, because somewhere within this sprawling piece is something audacious and playful.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 16, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
Even though it sometimes feels as if Corsini is trying to keep too many plates spinning, the whole risky exercise pays off to provocative effect.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 16, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
By the time we reach an apocalyptic payoff, Titane has skated on and off the rails several times, with insouciant abandon. You miss the combination of bravado and control that made Raw work so well, but the deranged cocktail of outrage, excess, conceptual ferocity and sheer silliness on display here will make you gasp – and occasionally flinch.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 13, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
It’s a film made with honesty, integrity and a certain grace, but it can’t quite overcome an earnestness that was never a problem in Hansen-Love’s best films, which carried their literary and cinematic inspirations lightly.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 13, 2021
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- Jonathan Romney
Compartment No. 6 is something of a minimalist shaggy dog story, ending on a bittersweet low-key note.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 12, 2021
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