J.R. Jones
Select another critic »For 1,513 reviews, this critic has graded:
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43% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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54% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6.5 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
J.R. Jones' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 59 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Baader Meinhof Complex | |
| Lowest review score: | Bad Boys II | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 697 out of 1513
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Mixed: 598 out of 1513
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Negative: 218 out of 1513
1513
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- J.R. Jones
As clever as he is crude, Cohen alchemizes bad-taste comedy into Strangelovean satire.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
There’s no denying this is a coldly commanding tale in which Haneke’s signature obsessions--bourgeois control, sexual repression, emotional cruelty, cathartic violence--simmer quietly as subtext before bursting into the open in the final reels.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The moral dilemmas are perfectly fused with the amped-up action and outsize characters, but they're impossible to miss: like all of us, the people of Gotham have to protect themselves from evil without falling prey to it.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
For a movie about the importance of memory, Away From Her is appropriately sophisticated in its treatment of time. Polley has broken the chronological story into three sections of unequal length and woven them together, approximating our own mercurial journeys through the past.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
In a truly great movie the form becomes indistinguishable from the story, and that’s certainly the case here.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The show has been the gold standard for satirical TV ever since it debuted in 1989. This long-awaited movie adaptation has plenty of laughs, plus an assortment of milestones for fans.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Like the Coens’ protagonist in "The Man Who Wasn’t There," Stuhlbarg is driven to an existential crisis, but in contrast to the earlier movie, with its tired noir moves, this one is earnestly engaged in the question of what constitutes a life well lived.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The good humor bubbles up from a deep reservoir of affection for Hollywood schlock.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
A quantum leap in movie magic; watching it, I began to understand how people in 1933 must have felt when they saw "King Kong."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
After the portentous "No Country for Old Men," Joel and Ethan Coen return to their trademark brand of cruel, misanthropic farce, and for dark laughs and hurtling narrative momentum this spy caper is their best work since "Fargo."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
French director Gaspar Noe has kept a pretty low profile since his 2002 drama "Irreversible" notorious for its brutal nine-minute anal rape scene. But this epic, psychedelic mindfuck confirms him once again as the cinema's most imaginative nihilist.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Directed by John Hillcoat, this Aussie feature perfectly re-creates the charbroiled landscapes and cruel psychodrama of the old Sergio Leone westerns, with John Hurt particularly fine as a raging old mountain goat.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This drama about an obese, illiterate black teen in Harlem practically guarantees some emotional uplift. But when it arrives, eventually, its authority is unimpeachable, so deeply has director Lee Daniels (Monster's Ball) immersed us in the depths of human ugliness.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
A brief but piercing cameo by Imelda Staunton (Vera Drake), as a desolate old woman who fiercely rejects professional counseling for depression, drives home Leigh's greatest insight, that true happiness is not found but realized.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jan 13, 2011
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- J.R. Jones
Such is the extraordinary achievement of The Hurt Locker: it has the perspective of years when those years have yet to pass.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
A sense of reconciliation is Malick's great accomplishment in The Tree of Life, affording us equal wonder at grace and nature alike. - Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
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- J.R. Jones
Of course no Western director can make a movie about Africa without being accused of colonialism himself, and some critics have faulted The Last King of Scotland for focusing on its white hero as black corpses pile up around him. But although the movie takes place on an international political stage, it's still a drama of individual allegiance.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
At the very least, it's more honest and involved in its portraiture of American soldiers in Iraq than anything TV news of any political persuasion has given us.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The mix of dark humor, creeping suspense, and a sort of apocalyptic tenderness makes this the best horror flick in years.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
An explosive but scrupulously journalistic drama about the radical group that terrorized Germany for nearly 30 years.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
As with the earlier movie, this one turns in on its own morality like a Möbius strip, endorsing kindness by practicing slaughter, and pulls us along for the ride. Detractors will call its reasoning ridiculous, and they'll be right - though I doubt that will bother Goldthwait, who makes a living being ridiculous.- Chicago Reader
- Posted May 10, 2012
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- J.R. Jones
This powerful South African drama turns on the debut performance of young Presley Chweneyagae as the hood, and it's magnificent: a stone-faced killer in the opening scenes, he becomes an open book as the story progresses, as frightened, confused, and needy as the baby he drags around town in a shopping bag.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The movie gradually deepens from odd-couple comedy into Catholic-themed drama, but it remains marvelously funny throughout. Instead of hitting the easy notes of black humor, McDonagh skillfully modulates between broad character laughs and the men's piercing anguish as the story nears its bloody conclusion.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Holofcener's work is often classified as comedy of manners, but at her best she trades in something much more resonant--the comedy of mores. Here she dives into the fascinating matter of why some people impulsively give and others compulsively take, and how people are taught to second-guess and quash their own generous impulses.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Werner Herzog is a stranger in a strange land as soon as he gets out of bed in the morning: in this travelogue of Antarctica, his perverse curiosity and zest for the harshest extremes of nature transform what might have been a standard TV special into an idiosyncratic expression of wonder.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The songs don't advance the narrative lyrically so much as follow the two characters' uncertain relationship through the slow realization of their themes; in particular a scene in which they first jam together in the back room of a music store is a gem.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Dogtooth, a bizarre black comedy from Greece that won the Un Certain Regard prize at the 2009 Cannes film festival, involves a conventional middle-class family--mom, dad, teenage son, two teenage daughters--that turns out to be warped beyond belief.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Given the movie's slow, careful development, I was hardly prepared for the cold-sweat suspense of the last half hour.- Chicago Reader
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