Jonathan Rosenbaum
Select another critic »For 1,935 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
42% higher than the average critic
-
2% same as the average critic
-
56% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 4.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jonathan Rosenbaum's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 62 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Breathless | |
| Lowest review score: | Bad Boys | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 961 out of 1935
-
Mixed: 744 out of 1935
-
Negative: 230 out of 1935
1935
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The film’s sophistication is compromised by the rather dumb plot, but some of the numbers—especially “Think Pink” and “Bonjour Paris”—are standouts.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 7, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Posted May 5, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A significant influence on Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch, this grueling pile driver of a movie will keep you on the edge of your seat, though it reeks of French 50s attitude, which includes misogyny, snobbishness, and borderline racism.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jul 1, 2020
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This packaged tour through the great man's career is unenlightening and obfuscating, despite an adept lead performance by Robert Downey Jr.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 30, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This isn't a major Dante effort, but his ability to make a good-natured satire that allows an audience to read it several ways at once is as strong as ever, and many of the sidelong genre notations are especially funny.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
But the inspirational aspects of the tale--which mainly has to do with the determination of Close to form a vocal orchestra at the camp, despite the class divisions between the women--never quite carry the dramatic impact they're supposed to.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Results are classy entertainment with little to interest women viewers but very shrewdly and cleverly put together, and probably more rewarding in long-range terms if you invest in Fox or Dreamworks than if you actually see the movie.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This 2002 German documentary (in English) by Marta Kudlacek is the best portrait of an experimental filmmaker that I know.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A few of the bad-taste gags are funny, and Carrey's grimaces have a certain inspired delirium, but this is a long way from the social comedy of Jerry Lewis.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Like most of Lee’s work, this movie bites off a lot more than it can possibly chew, and it bristles with the worst kind of New York provincialism.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This leads to some fairly amusing gags involving surreal ads for actual products (e.g., for Jaguar: “Sleek and smart. For men who'd like hand jobs from beautiful women they hardly know”). Moore's boss is so horrified by this development that he sends him to a sanitarium, at which point the movie takes an abrupt nosedive into the sort of tacky media lies it is supposedly attacking.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A strong, disturbing picture (1988) in which Meryl Streep’s beauty and talent and director Fred Schepisi’s intelligence are both shown to best advantage, without easy points or grandstanding.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The only problem I was faced with was trying to understand what exactly it was that I enjoyed, and how this movie differed from the play I'd read.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
One can have a reasonably amusing time with this predictable sequel, which is a bit longer on action and shorter on wit and character than the original (hence less good, in my opinion), but still diverting and harmless enough.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Arguably Woody Allen's funniest movie. A riotous object lesson in how much dialogue can transform visuals, and Allen works wonders with it.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The most obnoxious case of masculine swagger since Andrew Dice Clay, with just a tad of Paul Lynde thrown in for spice, Jim Carrey defies you not to bolt for the exit while playing the title hero in this 1994 comic mystery.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This curious ecological parable was directed by George Miller (Babe: Pig in the City), who still has an eye and a sense of humor but on this particular outing can't get the script he wrote with three others to make much sense.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Director Jonathan Demme's farcical and broad 1988 comedy, written by Barry Strugatz and Mark R. Burns, doesn't really work, but there are plenty of enjoyable compensations.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is a remarkably gripping, suggestive, and inventive piece of storytelling that, like Kubrick's other work, is likely to grow in mystery and intensity over time.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Not to be confused with the 1959 Mamie Van Doren-Mel Torme exploitation item, this is an uneven first feature (1996) by independent filmmaker Jim McKay about the friendship of three rebellious high school seniors.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The film runs for 134 minutes, but Lumet keeps things moving with his sharp eye (and ear) for New York detail and his escalating sense of liberal outrage.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
There's some excellent comedy early on involving the mutual incomprehension of Africans and Americans, though this eventually gives way to solemn, ethnocentric mush about one African's reading of the story of Jesus, demonstrating as usual that sustained subtlety is hardly Spielberg's forte.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
On the whole, the adaptation is faithful but some of the qualities of Dinesen's language are lost in translation or through abridgment, and the politics have been needlessly simplified.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is hilarious, deadly stuff, sparked by the cynical gusto of the two leads as well as the fascinating technical display of how TV "documentary evidence" can be digitally manufactured inside a studio.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Awkward storytelling and spotty exposition reduce it to a string of rude shocks--not even the eventual denouement provides a lucid enough account of where this is all coming from.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Everything seems to fall into place according to earlier Egoyan films, which suggests that you're likelier to enjoy this one if you haven't seen the others.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Lacks the scariness, the mystery, and even much of the curiosity of Rivette's better work.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The script by producer David Franzoni, John Logan, and William Nicholson is serviceable but not exactly inspired.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Part of Morton's achievement is to present all four people through the viewpoints of the other three; Wagner can't do that, but the performances are so nuanced that the characters remain multilayered, and they're not the sort of people we're accustomed to finding in commercial films.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I can't think of a better portrait of contemporary Paris or the zeitgeist of 2001-'04 than Chris Marker's wise and whimsical 58-minute 2004 video...no one can film people in the street better than Marker or combine images with more grace and finesse.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A very curious and eclectic piece of work--fresh even when it's awkward.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
None of the characters or ideas is allowed to develop beyond its cardboard profile.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This rambling but beautiful feature by Theo Angelopoulos may seem like an anthology of 60s and 70s European art cinema: family nostalgia from Bergman and seaside frolics from Fellini; long, mesmerizing choreographed takes and camera movements from Jancso and Tarkovsky; haunting expressionist moods and visions from Antonioni.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
As Dr. Octopus, Alfred Molina makes a more baroque supervillain than Willem Dafoe did as the Green Goblin, but the other stars--seem happy to be giving us more of the same.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Certainly one of the director's most personal and obsessive works—even comparable in some respects to Malcolm Lowry's Under the Volcano in its bottomless despair and bombastic self-hatred, as well as its rather ghoulish lyricism.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This 1975 satire about a “Young American Miss” beauty pageant and the middle-class mentality of small-town southern California is Michael Ritchie’s best feature, though it hasn’t won anything like the reputation it deserves.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Nichols is so astute at directing the actors (who also include Bill Nunn, Donald Moffat, and Nancy Marchand) that it's relatively easy to overlook the yuppie complacency, shameless devices (starting with an adorable puppy), and product plugs (especially Ritz crackers) that undermine the seriousness of the whole project.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The results are masterful, admirably unsentimental, and never boring, if also a little stodgy.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It may drive you nuts, but it’s probably the most inventive and original Godard film since Passion.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Imagine combining bad imitations of the "Ace Ventura" and "Austin Powers" movies and you'll have a rough idea of this feeble Dana Carvey farce.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Broadly speaking, the popular literary biopic is a hopeless subgenre, but this account of the relationship between Sylvia Plath and husband and fellow poet Ted Hughes manages to test the rule thanks to its unusual seriousness and first-rate performances.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This brisk, free-falling fantasy about the famous collators of German fairy tales, played here as a kind of comedy act by Matt Damon and Heath Ledger, is Terry Gilliam's most entertaining work since the glory days of "Time Bandits," "Brazil," "The Adventures of Baron Munchausen," and "The Fisher King."- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Wears its art, as well as its heart, on its sleeve -- so much so that I feel guilty for not liking it more.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Storper is pretty good at playing with and against certain western cliches in his treatment of the good guys (including Annette Bening's character), but resorts to pure cliche when it comes to the villians (e.g., Gambon and James Russo).- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The adroit mixture of pantheism and sentimentality continues to be sufficiently timeless to allow Disney's heirs to recycle this picture endlessly.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A mainly routine Hong Kong action film from fleet and floppy-haired action hero Jackie Chan. It's light on plot and character, but the stunts are well staged.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I'm a sucker for fantasies, but this one is so undistinguished and arbitrary that it left few traces in my consciousness, apart from the impression that the filmmakers resort to cruelty whenever they run out of ideas, which is often.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This outrageous comic fantasy may not sustain its brilliance throughout all of its 112 minutes, but it keeps cooking for so much of that time that I don't have many complaints.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
John Frankenheimer is credited as director, but given the scrambled, multiple agendas at play here, he seems to function more like a bemused traffic cop.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If your idea of a good time is watching a lot of stupid, unpleasant people insult and brutalize one another, this is right up your alley.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A highly entertaining form of ecological agitprop--radical but accessible.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
To boost this movie's rating to "worth seeing" would make me feel like a publicist or simply a dope.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Foreigners who argue that Americans are Neanderthal savages can point to this movie as persuasive evidence.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The theatrical monologues come close to defeating him (Wenders), and only Jessica Lange, as one of Shepard's abandoned girlfriends, manages to avoid cliche.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Gondry is a soft surrealist without much of a sociopolitical agenda, closer to Dr. Seuss than Luis Buñuel,- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
However one chooses to take its jaundiced view of history, it's probably the best film to date by the talented Kusturica (Time of the Gypsies, Arizona Dream), a triumph of mise en scene mated to a comic vision that keeps topping its own hyperbole.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's hard to deny that Marlon Brando's performance as a dock worker and ex-fighter who finally decides to rat on his gangster brother (Rod Steiger) is pretty terrific.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
High-spirited martial arts and comedy, with heavy doses of Star Wars and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This 1962 thriller is better than the Scorsese remake—above all for Robert Mitchum's chilling performance as a vengeful ex-con and an overall brute force in the crude story line—though it's arguably still some distance from deserving its reputation as a classic.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Better in certain ways than the original Apocalypse Now, though the flaws are also magnified.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Yes, the picture is flawed, but it is still something unusual in contemporary movies, a work that deserves to be called honorable, and not only in its intentions.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Robbins is attempting too much here, but the 70 percent or so that he brings off borders on delightful.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If the Disney animated original (1961) -- adapted from Dodie Smith's novel -- tried to approximate live action, this 1996 Disney live-action remake often tries to evoke cartoon.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's the romantic sparring with Catherine Zeta-Jones as another glamorous thief -- not the unsuspenseful heists -- that makes this silly thriller lightly bearable.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This pretentious 2005 art movie is somewhat interesting for its wide-screen photography of the striking locale, but the storytelling is awkward and confusing.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
God save us when director Taylor Hackford decides to become a metaphysician and Al Pacino decides to demonstrate his genius by reading the phone book--or, to be precise, a script only slightly less repetitive and long-winded.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
For a movie that consists almost entirely of real sex and real rock 'n' roll, 9 Songs feels remarkably conventional.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Wong uses his brief evocations of the future mainly as a way of poetically lamenting the past.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Despite some awkwardness, this feature by writer-directors Richard Glatzer and Wash Westmoreland is a fascinating look at the area's Mexican-American milieu and other local subcultures, full of feeling, insight, and touching performances.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you're happy to watch a thriller about a tenth as good as Alfred Hitchcock's, director D.J. Caruso and screenwriters Christopher B. Landon and Carl Ellsworth hold up their end of the deal, at least until the proceedings devolve into standard horror-movie effects and minimal motivations.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The problem with all the time-travel high jinks, involving multiple versions of the major characters (a gimmick that Robert Heinlein handled much better in stories like “By His Bootstraps” and “All You Zombies—”), is that in order to make the plot even semiintelligible, writer Bob Gale and director-cowriter Robert Zemeckis have to turn all these characters into strident geeks and make the frenetic action strictly formulaic.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Nevertheless, the cast of mainly unknowns is so good, and Linklater is so adept at playing them off one another, that the two-hour running time never seems overextended.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is the kind of tasteful tearjerker that's often overrated and smothered with prizes because it flatters our tolerance and sensitivity.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The three neighborhood kids who venture inside this toothy trap are wittily conceived (as are other characters, like a goth babysitter), but though the overall conception suggests Hayao Miyazaki's "Howl's Moving Castle," the frenetic pacing seems as American as an apple pie in your face.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The filmmakers treat all the characters, not to mention the audience, as sitcom puppets.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is a fascinating and easy-to-take set of musings on a fascinating artist.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Unafraid to look absurd but lacks the self-conviction needed to come off as camp.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Though the filmmaker has by now ridiculed the martial-arts drama virtually out of existence, the final dance number -- actually closer to festive stomping than tapping -- somehow manages to transcend irony, conveying instead only Kitano's childlike exhilaration, with a sense of ease regained.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Has memorable characters and images. Yet the story is elusive and occasionally puzzling, and some of the ideas are amorphous and self-conscious.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
An efficient genre piece with a few provocative metaphysical trimmings; the mainly English cast is effective.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is a new form of obscenity that might be called suicide porn. It's not just the voyeuristic surveillance that's obscene, but the use of suicide footage as counterpoint to other stories as they're told. Steel shows no special insight into the subject, though even that couldn't justify such hideousness.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Juliette Lewis plays the out-of-town girl Depp takes a shine to once he starts getting tired of the married woman (Mary Steenburgen) he's involved with, and while the picture is too absentminded to explain what it is that makes Lewis move in and out of town, she and Depp make a swell couple. There are other rough edges as far as plot is concerned, but I liked this.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Leslie Dixon's script and TV sitcom specialist Garry Marshall's direction are basically warm, funny, and lighthearted, and the relaxed amiability of the two leads—as well as Chicagoan Michael Hagerty and Roddy McDowall (who doubles as executive producer)—helps to make this good family entertainment.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The silly story is basically just an excuse for some thrills and goofy one-liners, but even if the more likable characters tended to get killed off too early for my taste, I wasn't bored.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The eroticism is powerful, and the documentary candor and directness of the sex scenes make this well worth seeing.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Given the audacity, it would be a pleasure to report that the results are hilarious, but most of it isn't even funny, and the sense of "anything goes" hangs heavy over the film as it develops.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The movie's suggestiveness gives way to a certain thinness and lassitude.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review