Justin Chang
Select another critic »For 1,779 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: 1,080 out of 1779
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Mixed: 572 out of 1779
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Negative: 127 out of 1779
1779
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Justin Chang
At the heart of La Chimera is the question of how we bear the weight of the past while living in the present, and the answer that Rohrwacher settles on strikes me as both sensible and hopeful: we must, to the best that we can, eradicate any meaningful difference between the two.- The New Yorker
- Posted Mar 29, 2024
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- Justin Chang
Do Not Expect Too Much from the End of the World is often breathtakingly funny, but its absurdity arises from a powerful sense of outrage—a principled disgust with the stupidity, hypocrisy, venality, and cowardice of the modern world.- The New Yorker
- Posted Mar 25, 2024
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- Justin Chang
About Dry Grasses may be unhurried, with languid steppe-by-steppe pacing and long, luxuriant, exquisitely sculpted conversations, but it is also nimble, alert, and alive in ways that seem to have taken Ceylan himself by surprise.- The New Yorker
- Posted Feb 23, 2024
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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 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
It takes a confident storyteller to avoid the trap of overexplanation, to give us only a partial glimpse of her characters’ lives, and these narrative elisions have the effect of deepening rather than undercutting the story’s realism.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 1, 2024
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 30, 2024
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- Justin Chang
There’s also a fascinating dive into the inequalities that bedevil Boys State and Girls State themselves, reminding us how organizations often embody, at a structural level, some of the very problems they’re ostensibly trying to rectify.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 30, 2024
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- Justin Chang
It diverts for a while, only to dissipate almost immediately upon conclusion.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 30, 2024
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- Justin Chang
If the genre trappings seem familiar, it’s the prowling, ghostlike vantage of the camera that makes all the difference: Soderbergh has elected to tell this haunted-house story entirely from the perspective of the haunter. Shooting in wide-angled long takes that range in tenor from voyeuristic languor to nerve-shredding anxiety, he transforms a domestic horror exercise into another Soderberghian tour de force.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 30, 2024
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- Justin Chang
Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell reminds us that confusion is often a necessary first step toward enlightenment, and that bafflement and beauty often go hand in hand. This is a lesson that Thiên must learn as well. The gift of this movie is that it invites us to learn it alongside him.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 25, 2024
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- Justin Chang
So why does it all feel so laborious and overworked, so frantically self-regarding? It has something to do with the insipid quality of the songs, none of which threaten to lodge themselves in your brain the way the first movie’s lines so effortlessly do.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 10, 2024
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- Justin Chang
Amid the roaring motors and screeching tires of “Ferrari,” Michael Mann’s operatic saga of fast cars, furious women and the powerful human citadel who toyed with them all, a moment occasionally rises from the smoke with the grace and clarity of an aria.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 22, 2023
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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
Minute by minute, it’s a roving, inquisitive, elegantly expansive portrait of an establishment whose many constituent and tangential elements — farms and markets, kitchens and dining rooms, chefs and sous-chefs, servers and customers — function together in a kind of whirring, bustling day-to-day harmony.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 30, 2023
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 30, 2023
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- Justin Chang
As you leave The Boy and the Heron, you may feel strangely bereft, emptied out in a way that I suspect Miyazaki both intends and hopes to console us against.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 28, 2023
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- Justin Chang
Its glimmers of comic rage and generous helpings of battlefield carnage, though patchily entertaining on their own, never coalesce into a coherent reason for being.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 23, 2023
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- Justin Chang
Maestro holds its contradictions in balance; it sees the complexity and the tragedy of Lenny and Felicia’s romance, and also its undeniable tenderness and passion.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 22, 2023
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- Justin Chang
Less a movie about a scandal than a movie about a movie about a scandal, it seeks to interrogate and even subvert its own promise of ripped-from-the-tabloids titillation, even as it challenges the predilections of an audience that might seek out such a movie.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 16, 2023
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 9, 2023
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- Justin Chang
This is a heartbreaker about mothers and daughters, the cruelty of repression and the slippery but revealing nature of performance. And to the end, it remains steadfast in its conviction that a woman’s truth and her beauty are never at odds.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 3, 2023
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 2, 2023
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- Justin Chang
From unsettled beginning to wondrously open-hearted finale, The Delinquents is wise enough not to offer clear or easy answers, beyond its certainty that getting lost is the only way to be found.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 30, 2023
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- Justin Chang
With piercing matter-of-factness, Coppola ends this movie, her strongest in more than a decade, at just the right moment.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 27, 2023
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- Justin Chang
The Holdovers is a flat, phony, painfully diagrammatic movie masquerading as a compassionate, humane one.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 26, 2023
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- Justin Chang
Triet’s movie is a monument to the ambiguous and unknown, a labyrinth of half-glimpsed causes and vague, sinister effects.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 13, 2023
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- Justin Chang
One of the pleasures of “The Eras Tour” is the way it destroys the facile notion of a pure individual self. With its labyrinthine arc, jumbled chronology and dazzling changes of tone, milieu and costume, it’s Swift’s ode to invention and self-reinvention, the many different lives she’s lived and faces she’s presented over the course of her career.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 13, 2023
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- Justin Chang
Betts, whose first feature was the absorbing monastic drama “Novitiate,” has a gift for subverting and fulfilling expectations at once, and also for turning the strictures of traditional establishments inside out.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 12, 2023
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- Justin Chang
In The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial, Friedkin holds you rapt with the nimbleness of his camera placement (the sharp cinematography is by Michael Grady), the crispness of Darrin Navarro’s editing and, above all, the initially stiff but ultimately spellbinding rhetorical force of the actors.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 4, 2023
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