Justin Chang
Select another critic »For 1,781 reviews, this critic has graded:
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59% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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39% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.4 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Justin Chang's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 68 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Fire of Love | |
| Lowest review score: | Persecuted | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,082 out of 1781
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Mixed: 572 out of 1781
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Negative: 127 out of 1781
1781
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Justin Chang
The result is a tough, harrowing work of self-portraiture in which it’s Ito’s own journalistic tenacity, as much as her personal determination and outrage, that leads her to go public with her story, despite enormous pressure to do the opposite.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 12, 2024
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- Justin Chang
In Widows, diversity isn’t an opportunity for showy tokenism or liberal pieties. It’s a matter-of-fact reflection of a city’s seething internal dynamics, an opportunity to probe inequities of race, class and gender that few American movies, let alone American genre movies, ever attempt to address.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 11, 2018
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- Justin Chang
By zooming in and out of his protagonist’s consciousness, Marder casts aside any pretense of omniscience; he empathizes, but he also knows when to detach. Ruben’s journey is a privilege to witness, but it’s one he’ll ultimately have to walk alone.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 19, 2020
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- Justin Chang
Partly drawn from Zlotowski’s own personal experience, Other People’s Children sneaks up on you, with a depth and complexity of feeling that throws those glossy, idyllic opening moments into bittersweet relief.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 20, 2023
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- Justin Chang
The structuring theme of The Novelist’s Film may be artistic frustration, the kind that can spur a writer to call it quits, an actor to take a break and even an established director to reconsider his calling. But it’s also very much about finding creative renewal in unexpected places — a bookstore, an outdoor trail, a movie theater — and learning to embrace, rather than resist, life’s beautifully meandering flow.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 9, 2022
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- Justin Chang
Without sacrificing his taste for psychosexual perversity or his flair for violent grace notes, Park has given us a teasingly witty and elegant puzzle-box of a thriller whose pleasures are rooted not in visceral shock but in narrative surprise, and which wisely opts to seduce rather than pulverize its audience.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 20, 2016
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- Justin Chang
The concision of its story and the elasticity of its themes are crucial to its peculiar potency: Operating within tight narrative and budgetary confines, Seimetz seeks to reshuffle our perceptions, to alter our sense of how movies can represent the unrepresentable.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 7, 2020
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- Justin Chang
What fascinates the director, and clearly also fascinates his four outstanding lead actors, is the possibility of grace in a seemingly impossible, inconsolable situation. With considerable intelligence and disarming moral seriousness, they confront the question of whether forgiveness and understanding can be honestly extended or received, and whether healing can ever be more than an abstract concept.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 7, 2021
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- Justin Chang
It's a simple, cumulatively shattering record of life as we rarely see it captured in narrative or documentary cinema.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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- Justin Chang
Moselle’s movie is an empowering portrait of young women on wheels, but it proves no less surefooted when the wheels come off.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 16, 2018
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- Justin Chang
Coming-of-age dramas may be a dime a dozen at Sundance, but one this tender and truthful can make an entire subgenre feel shimmeringly new.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 12, 2024
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- Justin Chang
The experience of watching it produces readily identifiable flavors and associations: It’s a gentle-toned family drama and a moody futuristic fable, with a faint techno-paranoid aroma, a melancholy mouthfeel and a lingering aftertaste of existential unease.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 10, 2021
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 10, 2021
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- Justin Chang
What makes Detroit vital is not that its images are new or revelatory, but rather that Bigelow and Boal have succeeded, with enviable coherence and tremendous urgency, in clarifying those images into art.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 27, 2017
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- Justin Chang
Animism, apparitions, out-of-body experiences, sex with a catfish -- there's all that and more in Apichatpong Weerasethakul's wonderfully nutty Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives.- Variety
- Posted Mar 4, 2011
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- Justin Chang
For all the mysteries it chooses to leave off screen and on dry land, Chevalier speaks for itself: Scene by scene, it builds a vision of group dynamics as calm, violent and finally unyielding as the sea.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 2, 2016
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- Justin Chang
Madeline’s Madeline is the product of a lengthy, improvisation-heavy collaboration between Decker and her star, an astonishing teenage discovery named Helena Howard. It is also a skillful and imaginative blurring of fact and fiction, albeit one that insistently calls the act of such blurring into question.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 16, 2018
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- Justin Chang
Written and directed by the gifted first-timer Kelly Fremon Craig, and graced by a superb star turn from Hailee Steinfeld, The Edge of Seventeen is the rare coming-of-age picture that feels less like a retread than a renewal. It’s a disarmingly smart, funny and thoughtful piece of work, from end to beginning to end.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 17, 2016
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- Justin Chang
It’s a drama of resilient women, thoughtless men and crushingly unrealized dreams, told with supple grace, deep feeling and an empathy that extends in every direction.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 19, 2019
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- Justin Chang
Despite its generally frictionless flow from meal to meal, its showstopping delicacies and subtly comical asides, The Taste of Things is haunted, from the start, by an awareness of the passage of time.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 16, 2023
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- Justin Chang
I think that the filmmakers’ pessimism is inseparable from their compassion and that their compassion is inseparable from their rage.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 28, 2022
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- Justin Chang
What's bracing about Sorry Angel is that it refuses to allow the specificity of its characters — specifically drawn and superbly played — to be obscured or flattened by the drama of terminal illness. Neither man is made nicer or more palatable than he has to be.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 19, 2018
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- Justin Chang
Undine is a poker-faced fairy tale, a fantasy wrought by a committed cinematic realist. It’s an example of how a filmmaker can take an outlandish central idea and play it beautifully straight.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 3, 2021
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- Justin Chang
At the simplest level, the stories of trauma and loss told in In the Same Breath exist as a necessary corrective.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 12, 2021
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- Justin Chang
Mungiu is a master of the long, talky slow burn, and if R.M.N. often feels less focused and more sprawling than some of his earlier movies (“4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days,” “Graduation”), that’s a testament to its expansiveness and ambition. The story becomes increasingly gripping as it meanders and lingers, broadens and deepens, putting peripheral characters into play and bringing latent hostilities to the surface.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 27, 2023
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- Justin Chang
Even amid the loud, incessant pop of gunfire, Kurosawa avoids monotony; he has a knack for embedding ideas within action, and for developing action in ways that trigger yet more ideas.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jul 17, 2025
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- Justin Chang
The riveting interplay between Dench and Cate Blanchett draws blood with every scene, thanks to a precision-honed script and Eyre's equally incisive direction.- Variety
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- Justin Chang
A mesmerizing portrait of the director as acclaimed artist and tortured human being.- Variety
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- Justin Chang
Director Alex Gibney delivers not just a detailed, full-access account of his subject, in all his defiance, hubris and tentative self-reckoning, but also a layered inquiry into the culture of competitiveness, celebrity, moral relativism and hypocrisy that helped enable and sustain his deception.- Variety
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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- Justin Chang
The sly achievement of The Forty-Year-Old Version is to turn a critical eye on the very idea of success (by whose standards?), and to ponder exactly what level of compromise is acceptable to secure it.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 1, 2020
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