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
The result is a handsome if creaky and oddly inconsequential final film that lurches around the galaxy at light speed without actually getting anywhere, as it steers a course between the inventive and the inevitable.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Dec 22, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Directed with wit, subtlety and great emotional honesty by Lisa Barros D’Sa and Glenn Leyburn (the co-directors of 2012’s brilliantly life-affirming Good Vibrations), it’s a singular story with universal appeal – striking a very personal chord with some viewers while finding common ground with the widest possible audience.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Dec 10, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Built upon a wittily verbose script that delivers more laugh-out-loud lines than most of the year’s alleged comedies, Knives Out retains a beating human heart into which daggers are regularly plunged.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Dec 1, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
The primary tone is gentle and melancholic – an almost existential evocation of memory, and the longing to be made whole.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Nov 24, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
This often hilarious heartbreaker is simply Baumbach’s best film to date – insightful, sympathetic and rather beautifully bewildered.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Nov 17, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
For all its flash-back/flash-forward tricksiness, The Irishman rarely seems disjointed or thematically fractured. It conjures a kaleidoscopic illusion of depth that only starts to shatter as the pace flags in the final act.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Nov 12, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Tonally, the film is mercurial, capturing the multiple realities of its young subjects who are both children and soldiers – the distressing, disorienting dichotomy at the centre of its eerie spell. With skill and sensitivity, Landes manages to capture both sides of their fractured world, evoking empathy without resort to pity.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Nov 5, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Time and again, scenes of back-breaking struggle end with the screen fading to black, as if the film itself is simply too tired to go on or hanging its head in empathetic shame.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Nov 4, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Akinola (best known to some for his work on Doctor Who) is clearly completely in tune with the director, getting under the skin of his story and striking just the right note of internalised anguish and ecstasy that defines this tender, heartfelt and clearly very personal movie.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Oct 10, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Subtlety is not Phillips’s strong point. What he does have is an eye for a well-chosen location, an ear for a provocative line of dialogue and a finger on the pulse of very marketable, confrontational (if also “cynical”) entertainment. Add to this an incendiary central performance by Phoenix and Joker looks set to have the last laugh.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Oct 6, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
With footage as raw and dramatic as this, it’s a credit to composer Nainita Desai that her score remains restrained and understated throughout, emphasising subtler themes of endurance and empathy, while gesturing gently toward the possibility of hope – of love – even in the midst of tragedy.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Sep 26, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
The result is an A-list B-movie that juggles moments of breath-taking visual splendour with much on-the-nose speechifying about sins of the fathers and eternal isolation, spiced up with some action-packed silliness that entirely undercuts its more po-faced pretensions.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Sep 26, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
It adds up to a peculiar mix of the crowd-pleasing and the patience-testing, veering wildly between the entertaining and the frustrating, built round a story that ventures inexorably underground without ever getting to the heart of what lies beneath.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Sep 8, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
It’s a genuine modern masterpiece, which establishes Jenkin as one of the most arresting and intriguing British film-makers of his generation.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Sep 2, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
It’s powerful stuff: wryly tender, frequently funny, but insidiously suffocating. More than once I found myself stifling a scream – and I mean that as a compliment.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Sep 1, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
As the title suggests, the result is a tragicomic swirl of heartbreak and joy, slipping dexterously between riotous laughter and piercing sadness. At its heart is Banderas giving the performance of a lifetime in a role that, following his Cannes triumph, surely demands Oscar recognition.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Aug 25, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Favreau has simply taken things to their logical conclusion, using cutting-edge technology to create something that looks absolutely real while remaining absolutely unreal.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jul 21, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
While the direction may be deceptively unfussy, Deschanel does brilliant work bringing Kurt’s worldview to life, enabling us to understand his progress towards an artistic breakthrough, represented here by paintings conjured by (among others) Richter’s former assistant Andreas Schön.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jul 7, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Strickland’s work seems to exist in that strange space between the social-realist tragicomedy of Mike Leigh and the exotic kaleidoscopic imaginings of Nicolas Roeg or Ken Russell. It’s a mesmerising place to be, at once familiar yet otherworldly. Try it on for size.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jun 30, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Woody and Buzz et al are still wonderful creations, and time spent in their company is rarely wasted. But riffs about new owner Bonnie starting kindergarten and once-favoured toys getting left in the cupboard smack of old ground being retrodden.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jun 23, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
I found myself gripped by a universally accessible tale of a divided soul – a figure whose dual personas are embodied in the two names of the film’s title; Diego and Maradona.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jun 18, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
What we have instead is a succession of variously successful vignettes, only some of which hit that sweet spot between horror and humour, as we watch Arnaud’s life collapse around him.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Jun 2, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Fletcher is the real star of this show, a director whose enthusiasm for musical storytelling shines through every frame, hitting all the emotional high notes.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted May 29, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
It’s powerfully affecting fare; elegiac, evocative and profoundly cinematic.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted May 19, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
When a parishioner leaps to her feet, her spirit clearly moved, you’ll want to do the same. Wholy Holy indeed.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted May 14, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
“Narrative art is dead – we are in a period of mourning”; “To scandalise is a right, to be scandalised a pleasure”; “Refusal must be great, absolute, absurd…” Abel Ferrara’s infatuated tribute to Pier Paolo Pasolini is littered with such gnomic bon mots, which could apply equally to either director.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted May 9, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Certainly the performances by Léa Seydoux (already an important screen presence) and newcomer Adèle Exarchopoulos are extraordinary. Their portrayal of a blossoming, fragmenting relationship is shot through with genuine grace and conviction even when the film itself descends into indulgence.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted May 7, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Geirharðsdóttir commands the screen throughout, but she receives significant support from Jóhann Sigurðarson as Sveinbjörn, the gruffly avuncular sheep farmer who lives alone with his dog, Woman.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted May 5, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Jessie Buckley, who proved so electrifying in Michael Pearce’s psychological thriller Beast, lights up the screen as Rose-Lynn Harlan; a 23-year-old firebrand, fresh out of jail, wearing an electronic tag beneath white cowgirl boots.- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Apr 15, 2019
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- Mark Kermode
Like the musical itself, the film has timeless charm and a brave sense of adventure. Bravo!- The Observer (UK)
- Posted Apr 13, 2019
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