Mark Kermode
Select another critic »For 217 reviews, this critic has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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42% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 12.3 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Mark Kermode's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 78 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | 2001: A Space Odyssey | |
| Lowest review score: | Avatar: The Way of Water | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 157 out of 217
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Mixed: 60 out of 217
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Negative: 0 out of 217
217
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Mark Kermode
Director Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson’s feature debut intertwines music and politics in one of the best concert movies of all time.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jul 19, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
Every bit as immersive as Victor Kossakovsky’s recent documentary Gunda, about a sow and her piglets, The Truffle Hunters serves as a timely reminder that the world does not turn to the industrialised rhythms of mankind alone, and that we lose track of its natural heartbeat at our peril.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jul 11, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
While the result may occasionally get bogged down by dramatic contrivance, it’s generally buoyed up by a pair of likably bickering performances from the two leads.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jun 27, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
Suffice to say that, as with all of Wheatley’s best works, In the Earth combines humour and horror in terrifically bamboozling fashion, not least during a gruellingly extended amputation sequence that will have you squirming, laughing and wincing all at once.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jun 20, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
For all its apparent structural complexities, The Father is not quite as mysterious as its creators would have us believe.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jun 13, 2021
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- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jun 6, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
It’s a collection of grimly satirical snapshots, fitting together like the misshapen pieces of a Chinese puzzle ball to create a dyspeptic, dystopian portrait of our past, present and future.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted May 17, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
It’s the eerie mystery of sadness that rings most clearly through Nikou’s film, a meditation on the construction of personality that, like all the best ghost stories, combines wistful melancholia with a hint of wish-fulfilment, of lost souls who, in forgetting, are trying to remember.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted May 11, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
There’s a hardscrabble sense of ordinary ageing folk making the best of a bad deal in often desolate and unforgiving circumstances. Yet whatever hardships they face, it’s the air of community and self-determination that rings throughout Zhao’s empathic film.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted May 2, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
The drama may be down to earth, but that doesn’t stop the film – or indeed its protagonist – from dreaming big, and daring to look beyond the horizon.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Apr 28, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
What makes this more than just another formulaic feelgood film is the grit with which Chung evokes the hardscrabble lives of his characters, balancing the dreamier elements of the drama with a naturalism that keeps it rooted in reality.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Apr 5, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
This crystalline tale of memory, love and brain surgery from writer-director Lili Horvát (who made 2015’s The Wednesday Child) is a treat – sinewy, seductive and beautifully strange.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Mar 21, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
It’s a credit to Stanfield that he manages to keep these complex contradictions alive throughout his performance, capturing perfectly the uneasy manner that O’Neal exhibited on camera, his eyes darting anxiously as he attempts to read his surroundings, his manner a mix of fearful, furtive and oddly forceful.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Mar 16, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
It may lack the depth of Eighth Grade or the punch of Booksmart, but it’s still blessed with enough post-punk energy to raise a smile, several chuckles and the occasional fist-punching cheer.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Mar 7, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
This is Day’s show all the way, and her performance remains the film’s strongest suit.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Feb 28, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
The result is a nicely nasty tragicomedy, a rollercoaster ride that swaps real moral dilemmas for something more disposably entertaining, picking you up, spinning you around and then spitting you out with a neat sucker-punch ending that leaves you feeling entertained, if a little bit empty.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Feb 21, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
I found this a rewarding and entertaining drama, heavy with the weight of the past, yet buoyed up by the possibilities of the future.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Feb 14, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
A first-rate B-picture, and a timely reminder of the delights of well-crafted popcorn thrills.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Feb 9, 2021
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- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jan 31, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
Like the unblinking closeup that concludes the deeply moving (and ultimately redemptive?) epilogue to Quo Vadis, Aida?, Žbanić’s powerful and personal film keeps its eyes wide open.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jan 26, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
Throughout, Konchalovsky juxtaposes wide-ranging events with seemingly insignificant details to dramatic effect.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jan 17, 2021
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- Mark Kermode
It’s a visually sumptuous riot of ideas, pitched somewhere between a playful musical, a divine comedy and a metaphysical drama.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Dec 29, 2020
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- Mark Kermode
While some sections of the globe-trotting plot strike a baggy, backward-looking note, it’s the smaller moments that make this fly, particularly when the film uses fantasy to turn horribly real everyday harassments into moments of air-punching triumph.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Dec 21, 2020
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- Mark Kermode
The theatrical origins of Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom weigh heavy on this film, directed with a stagey air by Tony award winner George C Wolfe.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Dec 13, 2020
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- Mark Kermode
Scenes of faces melting and bodies merging have a satisfyingly tactile feel, harking back to the experimental cinematic trickery of Georges Méliès, albeit with added 21st-century oomph. There’s a real physical depth to Possessor that helps keep the story grounded even during its most outlandish flights of fantasy.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Nov 30, 2020
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- Mark Kermode
The main selling point is Loren, who combines world-weary abrasiveness with a sense of something softer, turning Rosa into a believably divided character who puts a brave face on the future while seeking refuge from the past in the sanctuary of her lonely basement.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Nov 15, 2020
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- Mark Kermode
This is full-blooded (and arrestingly tactile) fare, which gets right under the skin of its central character, in appropriately unruly and unflinching fashion.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Nov 11, 2020
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- Mark Kermode
As is customary, absurdist humour, global history and abject horror sit side by side, all equally weighted and witnessed.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Nov 10, 2020
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- Mark Kermode
Ozon first read Chambers’s novel as a teenager and his adaptation blends the prickly joy of that first encounter with the stylistic confidence of a film-maker revisiting an old flame.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Oct 29, 2020
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- Mark Kermode
In Time it’s an almost superhuman sense of togetherness that rings through, a refusal to bow down, to be broken or defeated.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Oct 18, 2020
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