Mark Jenkins
Select another critic »For 383 reviews, this critic has graded:
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46% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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52% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Mark Jenkins' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 62 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Drug War | |
| Lowest review score: | Grown Ups 2 | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 221 out of 383
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Mixed: 133 out of 383
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Negative: 29 out of 383
383
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Mark Jenkins
The brawling itself is every bit as inventive and exhilarating this time around... The script and acting, however, prove less successful.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
As is typical of the genre, the plot gets sillier as it unfolds, while the violence gets gnarlier.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
Shot in New Mexico on a limited budget, Boys of Abu Ghraib is a credible depiction of the tedium, frustration and humiliation of wartime service. (Jack gets coated in human excrement not once but twice.) Naturalistic scenes of boxing, bantering and masturbation, set to a rap and hard-rock score, emphasize that these boys are young American everymen.- NPR
- Posted Mar 28, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
The French Minister boasts robust pacing, screwball-comedy banter and an exuberant central performance. For most American viewers, though, the movie could use footnotes to go with its subtitles.- NPR
- Posted Mar 21, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
Director Neil Burger, whose last divergent character was the smart-drugged protagonist of Limitless, allocates more than enough of this overlong movie to details of life and society in future-Chicagoland. But he fails to make any aspect of the premise persuasive.- NPR
- Posted Mar 21, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
Although Boniadi makes Shirin nearly as likable as she’s supposed to be, writer-director Ramin Niami’s movie is crudely contrived and sloppily edited.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 20, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
If you're only going to see one film about the Battle of Stalingrad — and there are many — Stalingrad would be the wrong choice. Russian director Fedor Bondarchuk's treatment of the World War II turning point is shallow and contrived, if sometimes impressively staged.- NPR
- Posted Feb 28, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
If the movie fails to conjure soiled 19th-century Paris, that's not primarily because it was shot in Hungary and Serbia. More problematic are the English-language dialogue and actors who speak in a variety of accents and perform in a range of styles.- NPR
- Posted Feb 21, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
And if the narrative does drag in places, Amalric and Del Toro could hardly be better; the contrast between their styles fits ideally the characters of excitable analyst and impassive patient.- NPR
- Posted Feb 14, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
The movie wavers in tone, occasionally lurching into supernatural fantasy, and withholds information in a manner that’s more annoying than tantalizing.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 13, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
If Nenette as a character is more a narrative convenience than a depiction of an actual condition, her permanent childhood does provide the 63-year-old Balasko with an exuberant, unpredictable role. That she continues to make work for herself as both an actress and a director is a good thing, but it would be better if she found a more ambitious writer.- NPR
- Posted Feb 7, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
The Attorney can be melodramatic, and first-time feature director Yang Woo-seok is not yet a singular filmmaker. But the movie is carried by its rousing pro- democracy message and a lively performance from the versatile leading man.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 6, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
That the same performers keep returning in different roles, playing Peruvian and Japanese flyers as well as American ones, only adds to the sense of man as machine. Everything, and everyone, must run like clockwork. Yet no apparatus is foolproof.- NPR
- Posted Jan 31, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
Kore-eda is himself a father now, which may explain why his work has gotten sunnier.- NPR
- Posted Jan 16, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
Yes, The Rocket is a sports movie, with an outcome that's easily foreseen. The cultural specifics of this Laos-set tale, however, are far less predictable.- NPR
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Mark Jenkins
As Arbor, nonprofessional actor Chapman gives one of the fiercest performances of this kind since Martin Compston's turn as a different sort of teenage entrepreneur in Loach's 2002 film "Sweet Sixteen." He's riveting, even in his final moment of calm.- NPR
- Posted Dec 20, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
Over the nine months the movie chronicles, about half the refugees leave the school building. Many return to the Fukushima area, but none to Futaba, which is still radioactive and officially off-limits.- NPR
- Posted Dec 13, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
Cooper does slow the action and set it in the least glamorous of circumstances, which drains the pleasure from the thriller conventions. But just because Out of the Furnace isn't much fun doesn't make it profound.- NPR
- Posted Dec 6, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
The film was shot entirely in South Africa, and revels in golden light on dry yellow grasslands. But it's still a very British movie, a respectful view from a suitable distance.- NPR
- Posted Dec 2, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
Like "Eve's Bayou," her best-known movie, Kasi Lemmons' Black Nativity presents a child's view of a troubled family. The latter film is sweeter and slenderer, but that's only to be expected.- NPR
- Posted Dec 2, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
Set to Jeremy Turner's spare and mournful score, Narco Cultura is ultimately more pensive than lurid.- NPR
- Posted Nov 22, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
German history and culture are among Sokurov's concerns in this visually compelling, intellectually scattershot movie.- NPR
- Posted Nov 15, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
Because it serves up Armageddon with a side order of teen romance, How I Live Now is not always credible. But as a portrait of a surly 16-year-old whose internal crisis is overtaken by an external one, the movie is persuasive.- NPR
- Posted Nov 8, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
Basically the anti-"Kill Bill." Both movies are quilted together from their auteurs' favorite Asian action flicks, but where Tarantino's was overheated, Reeves' is elegantly iced.- NPR
- Posted Nov 1, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
The director recut the movie several times as events overtook it. She may yet do so again — although if more major changes occur, they could merit beginning another documentary. As The Square makes clear, Noujaim would not hesitate to rush back into the fray.- NPR
- Posted Oct 25, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
As The Fifth Estate excitedly illustrates, in the Internet age no one can ever really have the last word.- NPR
- Posted Oct 18, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
Rickman is too theatrical, and too British, to vanish entirely into the person of Hilly Kristal. But he's entertaining to watch, and ultimately one of the more persuasive actors in a movie that suffers from as many odd casting decisions as Lee Daniels' The Butler.- NPR
- Posted Oct 11, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
A Touch of Sin is the most dramatic and even lurid of writer-director Jia Zhangke's movies. The film-festival star hasn't quite become a Chinese Tarantino, however.- NPR
- Posted Oct 4, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
Reich has a good sense of humor, as is virtually required of an adult who's less than 5 feet tall — he has Fairbanks disease, the same condition that accounts for Danny DeVito's stature — so he's pretty much guaranteed a laugh when he hops to his feet and asks if he looks like an advocate of "big government."- NPR
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Mark Jenkins
Only the genre's most studious followers will be able to watch Muscle Shoals without being regularly astonished: Even if it sometimes gets lost in its byways, Greg "Freddy" Camalier's documentary tells an extraordinary story.- NPR
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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