Kimberley Jones
Select another critic »For 1,017 reviews, this critic has graded:
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40% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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58% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Kimberley Jones' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 59 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | All the Real Girls | |
| Lowest review score: | My Boss's Daughter | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 569 out of 1017
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Mixed: 311 out of 1017
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Negative: 137 out of 1017
1017
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Kimberley Jones
Origin doesn’t always get there, but the effort is exhilarating. It’s the contact high of an artist really going for it.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 17, 2024
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- Kimberley Jones
I will never understand the internet’s fascination with Sweeney, who appears to be scowling even when she’s smiling, but she and Powell both bodily throw themselves into their parts. The effort is there. It’s just a shame the material they’re working with isn’t better.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 2, 2024
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- Kimberley Jones
Thrillingly airborne and a riot of color, Migration’s many scenes of flying are an absolute joy.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 20, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
It takes only moments into the film, when star Timothée Chalamet first opens his mouth to sing, to discover Wonka’s two fatal errors: The songs are not good, and the guy singing them is even worse.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 13, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
We see the work, the figurative (and sometimes literal) sweat that went into crafting these characters. It’s capital-M Movie Acting, and I couldn’t love it more. It moved me.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 6, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
Scripted by Samy Burch, based on a story by Burch and Alex Mechanik, and citing head-spinning references from Ingmar Bergman’s Persona to Mike Nichols’ The Graduate to Hard Copy, May December moves a little like a dream, disorienting as the shimmering heat captured by cinematographer Christopher Blauvelt.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 16, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
The problem in adaptation here is that Collins’ source book accessed Snow’s inner monologue, a churn of competing emotions and priorities at odds with his unruffled outer self. Without that insight, Snow’s evolution from war-scarred orphan to what Donald Sutherland is playing in the original quadrilogy is rendered as blank as, well, snow.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 15, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
By fashioning itself a thriller above all else, Foe obstinately opts for the no-man’s land in between both tracks, in the process wasting its tiny, mighty cast, and the opportunity to say anything impactful.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 17, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
It’s an ugly place to be stuck for two hours: a credible depiction of human nature at its worst, sure, but not an especially illuminating one. Still, there’s nerviness here, and undeniable skill. I’d like to see what Domont does next.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Sep 27, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
It’s all fairly unsubtle, and not infrequently flat-out silly, but I enjoyed its modest charms, especially in contrast to the bombast of Branagh’s previous Poirot pictures.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Sep 13, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
Truly, it is elucidating for folks who’ve never seen dementia up close, and guttingly familiar to those who have. But even more profound is the film’s record of a remarkable love.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Aug 23, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
In Passages, Sachs’ enthralling eighth feature, he and his regular co-screenwriter Mauricio Zacharias return to the more experimental bent of Keep the Lights On, echoing that film’s elliptical nature and naturalistic presentation of sex, its dizzyingly destructive relationships and Euro-arthouse affect.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Aug 10, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
Barbie, the toy, see-saws in the culture between extremes: Is she an aspirational figure, or the fastest way to f*ck up a kid’s relationship to her body? A gateway to the imagination, or a slammed door? Barbie, the movie – an exhilarating, generous, deeply handmade comedy about a mass-market product – revels in these extremes.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jul 18, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
Alongside Kathy Bates and Laura Linney, Smith is one of three grande dames of acting headlining The Miracle Club. Disappointingly, director Thaddeus O’Sullivan doesn’t put any of them to good enough use in this featherweight Irish dramedy set in 1967.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jul 12, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
What the film itself is trying to communicate proves more elusive; whatever meaning Millepied meant to impart by tethering this “entirely new and unique artistic endeavor” to a century-and-a-half-old opera never quite made sense to me.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jul 5, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
Tilting surprisingly dark – I suspect the film is at least in part about how we process trauma – but also somewhat impenetrable on first watch, it was another startlement when I realized I was crying. I can’t wait to go back.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jun 22, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
But in going to such great lengths to avoid that film’s grim weirdness, the Super Mario Bros. Movie filmmakers have flattened the concept into benign nothingness. They’ve course corrected into the side of a mountain. There’s no heartbeat here.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Apr 4, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
Admirers of Hansen-Løve’s previous film, her English-language debut Bergman Island, may be surprised at how straightforward One Fine Morning is, how resistant it is to delivering a capital-letter Cinematic Moment.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Mar 22, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
Scaffolding his story on an illogical foundation, Braff (Garden State, Wish I Was Here) continues to be an aggravatingly unsubtle filmmaker, over-relying on totems of profundity (a train set, a tattoo) and showboating with the camera in ways that distract rather than enhance the drama.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Mar 22, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
By trying to give these women happy endings, or proposing fake reasons for how they came to produce indelible works, these alternative histories only achieve the opposite. They rob them of the truth of their lives.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Feb 23, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
For a movie that’s ostensibly about scratching at real feelings, it comes off as phony as a perfume ad.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Feb 16, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
This material is so rich probably any halfway decent filmmaker could assemble a competent doc tallying the two men’s extraordinary accomplishments. But only Lizzie Gottlieb could make a film where she does that plus needles her pop about wearing sweatpants for his sit-down interview.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 26, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
On film, goosed along by Thomas Newman’s jaunty score and a generically weepy power ballad co-written and performed by Hanks’ wife and producing partner, Rita Wilson, the effect is hollow, placating. They’ve turned themes of great love, loss, and the will to keep going into … easy listening.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 4, 2023
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- Kimberley Jones
She Said is a respectful, serious-minded effort that works so hard not to sensationalize the material, it works against its dramatic impact.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 16, 2022
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- Kimberley Jones
Forbidden love! Terrible betrayals! Decades-old repressed truths! The plot elements are all there for something emotional wrecking, but Grandage and his cast approach it with such enormous restraint, the oxygen is cut off completely. This is bloodless filmmaking.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 19, 2022
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- Kimberley Jones
Tilt your head and you can catch the ghost of combustive screen trios past: Design for Living, Band of Outsiders, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. But Amsterdam’s three leads – individually charismatic performers all – collectively can’t sell the film’s sentimental, facile idea that love beats all, even those pesky fascists. And that breaks my heart a little.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 6, 2022
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- Kimberley Jones
For all the fierceness of the elements, co-directors Anna Rose Holmer and Saela Davis, who previously collaborated on the well-regarded 2015 indie film The Fits, are in no rush here.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Sep 29, 2022
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- Kimberley Jones
A swing and a miss is too timid a dismissal. It’s a sumptuously dressed table that ends in a wet fart.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Sep 21, 2022
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- Kimberley Jones
Genial and unbothered, Confess, Fletch never climbs higher than mere adequacy.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Sep 14, 2022
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- Kimberley Jones
This pandemic-made feature teems with fertile ideas and observations – about social media, California Goopiness, reproductive trauma, feminist porn – that don’t always feel fully formed – more like purged – and her essential glibness undercuts the potential for real catharsis.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Aug 15, 2022
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