Mark Asch
Select another critic »For 36 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
44% higher than the average critic
-
8% same as the average critic
-
48% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Mark Asch's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 72 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | National Gallery | |
| Lowest review score: | The Greatest Beer Run Ever | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 21 out of 36
-
Mixed: 12 out of 36
-
Negative: 3 out of 36
36
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- Mark Asch
Wiseman shows us the “how” of art appreciation, from politics to philosophy, in a film vast in scope, and richly suggestive in insight.- Little White Lies
- Posted Feb 14, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
From its guileless exposition and comically life-drawn Americana, to its Scripture quotations and sensitivity to a child’s perspective, the film proceeds with a simplicity of inexhaustible depth.- Little White Lies
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
Like the best of the director’s work, Memoria lulls you into its rhythms, gives you the sparse outlines of an intellectual framework, then hits you with the full weight of accumulated lyricism that must be pure cinema.- Little White Lies
- Posted Jan 13, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
A gorgeous and grave anti-epic, Pacifiction proceeds in scenes that serve as pristine containers for Serra’s idiosyncratic style, slow and digressive, full of flabby jokes and windy talk. It’s like watching a tropical aquarium slowly fill with algae.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 2, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
The Boy and the Heron is richly self-synthesising and achingly sentimental, collating artistic motifs from across the Miyazaki filmography and nakedly articulating the hopes it places in the next generation.- Little White Lies
- Posted Dec 24, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
The challenge, such as it is, of watching a Mike Leigh movie is simply the challenge of being a person in the world – the challenge of paying sustained attention to others – and Pansy is among his most demanding and rewarding tests.- Little White Lies
- Posted Jan 29, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn is hyperbolic, surreal, and, yes, obscene. Its over-the-top ending meets the moment at its own fever pitch—it’s a true masks-off moment, in more than one sense.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 12, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
To an even greater degree than in most Hong films, the film’s scenes of casual small talk, awkward silences, polite smiles, and glasses clinked to change the subject, open up faultlines in the characters’ lives.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 2, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Little White Lies
- Posted Feb 14, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
The Mule is a beautiful, troubling film. It is a pearl formed around a grit of unease in the oyster of our nostalgia.- Little White Lies
- Posted Feb 14, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
Though it lacks the near-spiritual dimension of the recent “In Front of Your Face” (Hong’s best in years), The Novelist’s Film is another focused, charming autofiction, well-structured yet open to the inspirations of serendipity.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 18, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
It’s a bit difficult to find your footing in the first half-hour of “Concrete Valley,” and it’s arguable that in addition to starting too shapeless, the film ends too shaped. But niggles about calibration aside, the on-the-nose ending is a gut punch.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 19, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
The Tsugua Diaries has something of a chiasmus structure, with each half of the movie, each layer of reality, and each direction of time doubling back on and rhyming with itself.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 12, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
Onoda – 10,000 Nights in the Jungle, which runs two hours and 45 minutes, is an achievement: a moving and multifaceted film about one man’s quixotic attempt at leading a meaningful life.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 24, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
It’s also shot through with the outré symbolism and impulsivity that have long characterised its director’s long, strange career, particularly its late, nothing-to-prove stages. In short, Jerzy Skolimowski is 84 years young, and he is absolutely vibing.- Little White Lies
- Posted Feb 3, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Little White Lies
- Posted Feb 14, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
Mizrahi films one-on-one interviews with a shallow depth of field, so that her subjects appear with the occluded intensity of their own remembrances.- Little White Lies
- Posted Feb 14, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
This is breathtaking filmmaking, but would be a little hard to take for two-and-a-half hours. Thankfully, Serebrennikov has more tricks up his sleeve.- Little White Lies
- Posted Feb 12, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
The African Desperate is the work of an artist who has moved fairly seamlessly from the gallery to the cinema and has more than enough vitality and insight to join the canon of films about the Black experience in higher education- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 2, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
Sarah Walker is great in an unself-conscious way, foggily conveying Star’s blinking on-off struggle to bridge the gap between her inner monologue and the outer world. She speaks in a thick voice that sounds effortful and takes in the world with watchful, silent eyes. It’s the rare performance that’s magnetic in its passivity.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 10, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
If this cynical and funny consideration of the distance between a person and their curated image in the collective (un)consciousness comes with any caveat, it’s that it, itself, feels ever so slightly synergistic.- Little White Lies
- Posted Nov 8, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
Like Imitation of Life, The Last Showgirl treats high-gloss femininity as a form of false consciousness, an ideal imposed upon women that ends up alienating them from each other, particularly mothers from their daughters.- Little White Lies
- Posted Feb 28, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
Timely, anguished, and ultimately cathartic, the movie meets its moment.- Little White Lies
- Posted Feb 7, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
This is simply a generic and brutally efficient tearjerker – like its title, it aspires to archetypal grandeur and lands somewhere blander.- Little White Lies
- Posted Jan 7, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
After the self-contained and simmering Assistant this feels like Green’s attempt to make similar material more accessible.- Little White Lies
- Posted Nov 2, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
After so many punishing stories, most recently 2022’s Tori and Lokita, it’s hard to begrudge them the raw sentiment and mostly happy, hopeful endings of their newest one. But it comes too easy, in a film so artfully and opportunistically structured, which jumps from dramatic peak to dramatic peak as if skipping tracks on an album.- Little White Lies
- Posted Sep 1, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Little White Lies
- Posted Feb 14, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
Seidi Haarla gives a winning, intelligent performance as a naturally very clever person made to feel small and helpless in a strange land. But Yuriy Borisov pops from the first moments you see him: his hunched-shoulders posture; his abrupt, agitated movements and boxer’s duck-and-weave walk; the animalistic way he tears into food, impatiently and avidly.- Little White Lies
- Posted Apr 12, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
As an awards-bait biopic, Christy is basically solid; as another chapter in the star text of a soon-to-be-28-year-old woman basically no one on the internet can ever be normal about, it’s interesting – and also, given the entrepreneurial Sweeney’s social-media savvy, quite a canny bit of positioning.- Little White Lies
- Posted Dec 2, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Mark Asch
Without the captivating veneer of fiction, Stone’s “JFK Revisted: Through The Looking Glass” comes off as a much more rhetorically dishonest work. And without the brio of Stone’s highbrow-Sam Fuller imperial-phase filmmaking chops, it’s merely a wan appendix.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 19, 2021
- Read full review