Oliver Jones
Select another critic »For 200 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 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Oliver Jones' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 63 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Blaze | |
| Lowest review score: | Transformers: The Last Knight | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 118 out of 200
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Mixed: 40 out of 200
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Negative: 42 out of 200
200
movie
reviews
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- Oliver Jones
In a masterful bit of cinematic sleight of hand, Bong, the writer and director behind 2013’s "Snowpiercer" and 2017’s "Okja," harnesses the precise anxieties everyone of us is currently sharing — top of that list, the growing income gap and the crumbling planet — and uses them to make every scene in this blackhearted comic thriller crackle with energy and purpose.- Observer
- Posted Oct 15, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
It also happens to be the best ending of a movie this year and the work of a filmmaker completely attuned to both her craft and the inner lives of her characters. Moreover, the shot is the final act of passion and precision in a film that is teeming with both, a work of art whose flame will continue to smolder in your mind and heart well after you have left the theater.- Observer
- Posted Dec 4, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
Song has crafted a deliriously honest romantic drama that is utterly singular even while it calls to mind everything from Richard Linklater to Wong Kar-wai to David Lean’s Brief Encounter. This is a movie that flows over with patience, forgiveness, and tender wisdom — qualities all the more wondrous for their relative absence from modern society and its movies.- Observer
- Posted Jun 2, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
The Safdies’ film is a cinematically expressive tightrope walk that seems designed to leave your blood pressure permanently spiked. It can be relentless and hard to take, but it is brimming with surprise and a vivacity that radiates off the screen.- Observer
- Posted Dec 12, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
As a result, The Souvenir, Hogg’s fourth film, is an extraordinary rumination on memory and privilege while also being one of the most incisive movies ever to directly address — in moral, philosophical and personal terms — what it means to be a filmmaker.- Observer
- Posted May 17, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
Panahi has crafted a moral quandary fit for Plato; yet unlike his past works—including 2022’s No Bears and 2018’s 3 Faces (both of which, like this film, were filmed without permission in Iran)—there’s nothing theoretical or metaphoric on display here.- Observer
- Posted Oct 21, 2025
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- Oliver Jones
It’s a movie that is not only worth returning to again and again, but one you will be grateful to have walking alongside you for years to come.- Observer
- Posted Dec 11, 2024
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- Oliver Jones
Awkwafina’s true skill as a remarkably sensitive collaborator has only recently been revealed—last year doing broad comedy in "Crazy Rich Asians" and now here, where every scene requires a deft shading of sadness and guilt.- Observer
- Posted Jul 9, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
Even when the larger world that surrounds them is fuzzily rendered, when Wilson, Wolfe, Davis, Boseman and all those fabulous actors past and present are serving as our guides, gaining entrance into such uneasy places feels like a true gift.- Observer
- Posted Nov 20, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
The experience is simultaneously intimate and stirring; the film brings its audience to a thrillingly colorful and utterly relevant world of its own at a time when the primary purpose of other superhero movies seems to be to tease future installments and fill corporate coffers.- Observer
- Posted Nov 30, 2018
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- Oliver Jones
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse is as feverishly inventive in its visual presentation as it is slapdash and anemic in its storytelling.- Observer
- Posted Jun 5, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
Admittedly, A Real Pain is an acquired taste; like a top-flight IPA, it is at once overly aggressive and serenely balanced.- Observer
- Posted Oct 30, 2024
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- Oliver Jones
More than anything, Daughters—along with Greg Kwedar’s remarkable current release Sing Sing—speaks to the absolute societal and spiritual imperative of investing in rehabilitation, within prisons and outside their walls.- Observer
- Posted Aug 19, 2024
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- Observer
- Posted Nov 9, 2018
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- Oliver Jones
EO is a successful attempt by 84-year-old Polish filmmaker and sometimes actor Jerzy Skolimowski to both update and add color to the cinematic conversation about despair, purpose, and braying that Bresson started more than a half century ago.- Observer
- Posted Nov 22, 2022
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- Oliver Jones
The strength of Judas and the Black Messiah is that it moves well beyond rhetoric, or even historic reconstruction for that matter. Letting his talented cast lead the way, King has made a film centered on roiled emotions and relationships that are at once fractured and loving.- Observer
- Posted Feb 11, 2021
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- Oliver Jones
What is the meaning of life? When that question is posited in a deeply moving post-credits scene, the answer is like the film you just watched: incredibly funny and devastatingly true.- Observer
- Posted Jun 14, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
Is it all too cute? Almost, but not quite. Fire of Love is saved by the joy of film craft that pours forth both from the Kraffts and Dosa.- Observer
- Posted Jul 7, 2022
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- Oliver Jones
While the man in the title may have played a part in ushering us towards this unfortunate state, Mike Wallace Is Here is nonetheless a refreshing return to a more promising era when a swashbuckling, nicotine-huffing newsman made powerful people sweat for our collective edification.- Observer
- Posted Jul 26, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
While it is good that a director as versed on the subject of consent as Schwartzman is bringing her unwavering eye to the problem, it makes it all the more painful that we seem even further away from solving the issue then we were on that fateful August night in Ohio seven years ago.- Observer
- Posted Mar 26, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
While the film proudly remains a chamber piece very much in keeping with its roots in the theater, King opens it up in ways that show an innate knack for visual storytelling.- Observer
- Posted Oct 23, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
It’s a little long and leisurely. However, fueled by Rachel and Richard’s baby mania, it never drags.- Observer
- Posted Oct 5, 2018
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- Oliver Jones
We may never completely know the answers to all of Cavett’s questions, but Morgen’s film shows definitively that the sound and vision Bowie left behind, when writ large and loud on the silver screen, makes for an otherworldly journey of beauty, mystery, and transformation.- Observer
- Posted Sep 19, 2022
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- Oliver Jones
They have made a film absent of time that could not possibly be more of the moment.- Observer
- Posted Jul 9, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
An equally dreamlike and urgent act of radical archiving, Sierra Pettengill’s Riotsville, USA traces the origin of America’s militarized dismantling of social justice movements to a specific time and place.- Observer
- Posted Sep 14, 2022
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- Oliver Jones
By shining the light on Stone, Agrelo’s movie rightfully makes a national hero out of a historical footnote.- Observer
- Posted Jun 20, 2021
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- Oliver Jones
When it’s over, the chill it leaves in your spine is destined to last nearly as long as the smile on your face.- Observer
- Posted Oct 26, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
What results is a messy, ambitious, deeply emotional film that sometimes falls victim to the tropes of the genres it attempts to remix but never loses its power to move us.- Observer
- Posted Jun 11, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
This time, Godzilla is a powerful symbol of the addictive pull of destruction, and how once unleashed, weapons of mass destruction can never again be contained.- Observer
- Posted Dec 4, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
While the subject of her film used his flamboyant nature, church-rooted vocals, and percussive piano to invent something completely fresh, Cortés has stuck to the tried and true.- Observer
- Posted Apr 21, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
While it is done well enough, the more complicated family story it eschews feels rarer and more valuable.- Observer
- Posted Dec 14, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
Fortunately, it is a nuanced, intense and utterly involving look at how racist policies shape judicial and economic outcomes for families like the Carters, and it doesn’t dumb things down one bit.- Observer
- Posted Oct 9, 2018
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- Oliver Jones
The real issue undermining Durkin’s sophomore effort is central to the weaving of the film’s conceit. It looks like a horror movie, swims like a horror movie, and quacks like a horror movie, but it isn’t a horror movie. So then what the hell is it? Good question. After a long, slow build-up, The Nest winds up being as vacant as the Surrey country house of the title, and leaves the viewers feeling every bit as empty.- Observer
- Posted Sep 18, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
Like the metropolis that sprawls out far below the rooms she cleans, the film quietly pulses with life. And like Eve, we are left hoping she has a larger part to play in that world beyond smoothing blankets and folding toilet paper ends into perfect little triangles.- Observer
- Posted Jun 22, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
By the time Wright’s somewhat exhaustive film concluded, every moment of it propelled by a high-octane geeky affection that felt like a newly discovered alternative fuel, I was in the strange duo’s thrall.- Observer
- Posted Jun 20, 2021
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- Oliver Jones
While it was a little disappointing to see the film relegate the other candidates to backup singers to Representative Ocasio-Cortez’s leading lady, that doesn’t make their contributions to the movement that elected her any less significant. Nor does it dull the emotional impact of her remarkable achievement.- Observer
- Posted May 6, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
This is the rare sequel that packs constant surprises while still delivering on expectations.- Observer
- Posted Jun 14, 2018
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- Oliver Jones
So which side of the movie finally prevails — the lackluster conventionality of its text or the breathtaking singularity of its visuals and action? The latter does, if just by the nose on Brad Pitt’s perfectly imperfect face. Combined with the film’s lavish technical achievements, his classic movie star sturdiness makes Ad Astra a memorable filmgoing experience even as the story it tells slips off into the ether.- Observer
- Posted Sep 17, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
Produced by Cameron Crowe, who interviewed Crosby as a young journalist for Rolling Stone in 1974, the film spins a powerful and enlightening fable about the ultimate cost of survival. It’s about what happens when the most reckless and bridge-burning among us ends up being rock’s Harry Potter — i.e. the boy who lives — and must sift through the guilt and wreckage of all the relationships left in his wake.- Observer
- Posted Jul 17, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
Every thing about Fincher’s film—from his resurrection of his late father Jack’s script to his exacting recreation of a Hollywood in the midst of a creative explosion that it wouldn’t experience again for another 30 years or so—is a call to arms.- Observer
- Posted Nov 6, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
With its stunning John Ford-like vistas of a corpse laden Sahara and a vast Mediterranean Sea empty of aid vessels to help an immigrant ship overburdened with desperate and sick North Africans, Garrone has—on the surface—made a lush and monumentally disturbing feature-length commercial for staying home.- Observer
- Posted Feb 23, 2024
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- Oliver Jones
Stan’s trip to the moon may fade into the ether, but his ride down the highway with his brothers and sisters, all of them unsecured on the flatbed of a pickup truck is so brimming with immediacy that it won’t even matter.- Observer
- Posted Mar 30, 2022
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- Oliver Jones
While Berger’s film should be applauded for envisioning a way forward for the profoundly troubled and still deeply corrupt organization, by not more completely and honestly reckoning with the crimes of its past, its optimism for the future—while both deeply felt and dramatically conveyed—ultimately rings hollow.- Observer
- Posted Oct 23, 2024
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- Oliver Jones
By centering on the start of the film and its conclusion, you realize Wang possesses not only a preternatural feel for the emotional jumble of boyhood, but also an astute understanding of both film structure and how to mine many layers of unforced truth from his troupe of talented actors.- Observer
- Posted Jul 26, 2024
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- Oliver Jones
It’s not for everybody, and it’s far from perfect, but you’ll be hard-pressed to find a more thrillingly necessary use of the filmmaking form this year.- Observer
- Posted Sep 10, 2021
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- Oliver Jones
It is so uncannily adroit at balancing humor and pathos that the two complement rather than detract from each other.- Observer
- Posted Apr 25, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
A carefully considered mix of humor and melancholy glows in the fragile sunshine that bathes an isolated Welsh coastline in The Ballad of Wallis Island, a wan yet affecting consideration of lost love, forgotten bands and the odd ways those entities manifest themselves in our hearts and on our turntables.- Observer
- Posted Mar 28, 2025
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- Oliver Jones
This bold new film not only shatters comedy’s cold streak, but also serves as a powerful reminder of the vitality of the genre as both social commentary and shared experience.- Observer
- Posted Jul 9, 2018
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- Oliver Jones
By presenting this crucial cultural phenomenon in a staid documentary form and in the reverent tone of a hushed docent, The League has the unintentional impact of making Black baseball seem like ancient rather than living history.- Observer
- Posted Jul 17, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
For a movie that pulses with joyful expressiveness and brims with possibility, there is a tragic undertone to Ailey.- Observer
- Posted Jun 20, 2021
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- Oliver Jones
When violence does befall Clare and her family, it is far more devastating than anything she could possibly have imagined. It’s also as shocking and difficult to watch as any I have seen in a lifetime of watching violent movies.- Observer
- Posted Jul 24, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
It is an absurd premise, one made even more so by its execution, which at the hands of veteran Hollywood thriller director Martin Campbell (the one-time director of Bond films who has been in movie jail since 2011’s Green Lantern) is often lackluster and, on occasion, shockingly inept.- Observer
- Posted Apr 27, 2022
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- Oliver Jones
The ability of Kammerer and his young castmates to convey the bone-deep dread of artillery bombardments and tanks rolling overhead is matched only by Berger’s complete command of the machinery of war and propulsion of narrative.- Observer
- Posted Oct 24, 2022
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- Oliver Jones
Instead, by reshaping this charged moment culled from somewhat recent American history in his own image, Sorkin has made The Trial of the Chicago 7 about something else entirely: himself.- Observer
- Posted Oct 16, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
There is an immediacy to the film so rare in period biopics and such a tactile physicality to its intellectual gymnastics. By the time Shirley draws to a close, you end up feeling pleasingly spent, like you just stayed up all night drinking a bottle of Canadian Club while discussing literary theory with a dear old confidant you hadn’t seen in years. Some friends just tire you out like that, and they are almost always the best kind.- Observer
- Posted Jun 5, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
How to Blow Up a Pipeline both fully embraces its agitprop roots while also transcending them.- Observer
- Posted Apr 7, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
The result is a film—Kore-eda’s first outside of his native country and language—that feels almost aggressively low-key, low stakes and notably less urgent than the filmmaker’s earlier works.- Observer
- Posted Jun 30, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
Along with Dickey’s equally feral and vulnerable performance, what stands out most in Blaze is just how fully formed and realized Hawke’s vision is as a filmmaker.- Observer
- Posted Sep 7, 2018
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- Oliver Jones
Unlike many of the other films of its ilk, The Rhythm Section never feels the need to move beyond Stephanie’s sadness and sense of loss. This is really a tragedy thriller more than it is a revenge thriller.- Observer
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
Like many third iterations, this one shows signs of the creative team growing bored with what made the story worth telling in the first place.- Observer
- Posted Aug 31, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
The movie shows that, true or not, in the right hands and with the right actors, this oft-told tale—like the Western genre itself—can course with the kind of venturesomeness that makes cinema so exciting no matter the circumstances under which we watch it.- Observer
- Posted Apr 24, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
A gentle yet high-caliber mash-up of Sartre and Wes Anderson’s Bottle Rocket, Carmichael’s film is irreverent, serious, and heartrendingly sad in ways so crushingly honest that the unlikely outcome is spiritual uplift.- Observer
- Posted May 16, 2022
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- Oliver Jones
James Gray’s Armageddon Time is the kind of movie you get when a talented filmmaker thinks back upon the painful moments of his childhood and then, after close reflection, decides to remake The 400 Blows.- Observer
- Posted Oct 28, 2022
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- Oliver Jones
It is a difficult and painful subject to consider, talk about, and confront both in life and in the movies. But Kormákur’s quiet little film reminds us that when we do—and however we do it—the process can remind us what it is like to be human.- Observer
- Posted Jul 12, 2024
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- Oliver Jones
Dream Scenario might have worked better as a character study, which is clearly what Cage wants it to be.- Observer
- Posted Nov 9, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
This is not simply one of the finest films to explore the unique challenges that beset women in rural parts of the country where men outnumber them two-to-one. It is also one of the only to illustrate the devastating social impact of the war against women and their reproductive rights that has been waged by statehouses across the nation.- Observer
- Posted Apr 17, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
The latest jacked up, action extravaganza from stunt man turned director David Leitch (his last film, the not-very-good Bullet Train, is still leagues ahead of this movie in terms of imagination and execution), teems with contempt for the audience it is desperate to win over.- Observer
- Posted May 3, 2024
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- Oliver Jones
As he has shown in other directorial efforts—most especially 2007’s Gone Baby Gone—Affleck has a real knack for both building narrative momentum and attenuating a film’s emotions until they ascend into a satisfying catharsis.- Observer
- Posted Mar 28, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
The Killer is a simultaneously hollow and profound meditation on the numerous ways identity has been swallowed up and voided by the various demands of commerce and brand.- Observer
- Posted Nov 13, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
To be successful in confronting, understanding and dismantling the institutional homophobia that continues to be a cancer in American life requires depth, perspective, and a sense of inquiry—three qualities in short supply in The Inspection.- Observer
- Posted Nov 21, 2022
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- Oliver Jones
What it lacks in textual depth, it makes up for with the genuine sympathy it evinces for characters that most films would dismiss as stupid, depraved and undeserving of our empathy and concern. Like Freud, Scheinert seems to understand that even people who commit unspeakable acts deserve our understanding.- Observer
- Posted Sep 27, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
The result is a well-intentioned but ultimately torpid film, one that feels much more concerned with saying something important than it is the far more noble task of conveying a compelling story worth telling.- Observer
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
All of this unvarnished evil is depicted with haunting beauty and uncompromising artistry. Shot in 35mm black-and-white by master Czech cinematographer Vladimír Smutný, every shot is breathtaking to behold.- Observer
- Posted Jul 17, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
[Adlon] has crafted a film that is at once sophisticated and aggressively sophomoric, profoundly romantic and deeply cynical, and as feminist as a barbecue at Gloria Steinem’s house and yet seemingly apolitical enough to appeal to your average Entourage fan.- Observer
- Posted May 20, 2024
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- Oliver Jones
When Whannell’s movie is at its best, the audience is not just a witness to the terror; we are part of the machinery that inflicts it. Which is not to say that — when it works — this remake of James Whale’s 1933 classic is a success born of camera placement, special effects, or even conceptual daring.- Observer
- Posted Feb 27, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
The manner in which Mikkelsen, the former Danish gymnast and dancer we chiefly know for his suave villains in 2006’s "Casino Royale" and the NBC series "Hannibal," plays off his largely mute charge is simply extraordinary.- Observer
- Posted Jan 31, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
Some of the visual horror will no doubt be of interest to genre fans, but even there the appeal is limited. In an age when we are awash in efficient and involving horror movies — from "Halloween" to "A Quiet Place" to even "The Nun" (which is not that great but is at least short) — Suspiria comes off as bloated and disconnected.- Observer
- Posted Oct 25, 2018
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- Oliver Jones
Marvel's latest movie feels just as sanitized and safe as its other products, even with its killer cast and talented director Destin Daniel Cretton.- Observer
- Posted Aug 23, 2021
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- Oliver Jones
Heretic’s fatal flaw lies in its very conceit. The film seems to have forgotten that when playing cat-and-mouse games, the cat, at least, is meant to be having fun. Here no one is—not Grant and least of all, not us.- Observer
- Posted Nov 13, 2024
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- Oliver Jones
The pace is always zippy but rarely hyper, and there is just enough space for the film’s many emotional beats to resonate.- Observer
- Posted Dec 20, 2021
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- Oliver Jones
While there’s something dispiriting and cynical about this conflation of product placement and pop commentary, it does give the film a kitchen sink quality: there is literally something for everyone.- Observer
- Posted Nov 14, 2018
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- Observer
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
You feel the late genius through the way Day carries her body, so lissome yet creaking with the weight of both her talent and addiction. The Rise Up singer not only matches our imagination’s version of Holiday, but somehow beats it: she seems so present yet ethereally sozzled in a manner that suggests she may be operating on another plane.- Observer
- Posted Feb 25, 2021
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- Oliver Jones
It’s far from subtle, more than a little sudsy, but also pleasingly direct and full of heart. Most significantly though, its timing is perfect.- Observer
- Posted Aug 14, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
Bob Trevino Likes It, the feature film debut from award-winning short film and web series director Tracie Laymon, wistfully and powerfully recaptures a more guileless era in our digital lives—which the Facebook interface and the lead character’s cracked second-gen iPhone put at around 2010.- Observer
- Posted Mar 20, 2025
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- Oliver Jones
By the end, Shazam! feels like a corporate product that’s so thirsty for approval from all quadrants that it never ends up figuring out what it is.- Observer
- Posted Mar 25, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
The sense of joy that emanates from nearly every frame of Theater Camp, a film that arrived like a burst of July sunshine in the January frost of this year’s Sundance, is as palpable as grease paint and every bit as sweet as bug juice.- Observer
- Posted Jul 17, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
Ostensibly a middling programmer meant to satiate our cinematic bloodlust during the lull between John Wick 4 and The Equalizer 3, this period neck-snapper from Finnish filmmaker Jalmari Helander may not only surpass both those films, it could end up taking the gore-splattered crown as the most satisfying, over-the-top violent action movie of the summer.- Observer
- Posted Apr 27, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
A kitchen-sink directorial debut from actor Dev Patel, Monkey Man is a knife-through-the-throat revenge thriller, a diatribe against institutional injustice and wealth inequality, an ode to both ancient and modern Indian culture and folklore, and a portfolio that proudly displays the action hero bona fides of its prodigiously muscled leading man— who just so happens to be the director himself.- Observer
- Posted Apr 4, 2024
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- Oliver Jones
That sense of history grabbing you by the throat was still there—it’s all but impossible to drain that quality out of any iteration of the plays in Wilson’s towering Pittsburgh Cycle—but the grip on your windpipe was not nearly as tight as it should be.- Observer
- Posted Nov 25, 2024
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- Oliver Jones
The intimacy and honesty of the family rapport, the razor sharp dialogue and—most unexpectedly—its deeply grounded humor keep the film and its slight and compassionate story utterly engaging.- Observer
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Oliver Jones
If Spider-Man Far from Home is a triumph, as many will argue and its box office will undoubtedly confirm, it is a triumph of capitalism, not art. It is the film’s fervent hope that we, as consumers, are starting to lose our ability to tell the difference.- Observer
- Posted Jun 27, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
The often-stilted dialogue of the teenage protagonists doesn’t fare much better. As a result, many of the performances from the seemingly talented cast come off as stiff and stagey.- Observer
- Posted Apr 20, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
The beating heart of the film, this performance is further evidence of what a gift Foxx’s late career shift to supporting parts has been for filmgoers.- Observer
- Posted Jan 8, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
The perfect actor with the perfect part at an ideal moment in his career, Domingo doesn’t simply embody Rustin, he liberates him.- Observer
- Posted Nov 16, 2023
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- Oliver Jones
Instead, we just sort of soak in the despondency, like lukewarm water in a half-filled hot tub. While sometimes touching, the results of this noble experiment lack dynamism. Eventually whatever is fresh about the approach is undercut by a familiar will-the-man-child-finally-grow-up trope that has made some of Apatow’s lesser films feel insular and self-indulgent.- Observer
- Posted Jun 10, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
This is a movie that’s back-loaded to the extreme: all of its action takes place in the last 20 minutes. Not that Leigh would ever be confused with Tarantino, but it would have been considerably more engaging to have started with the main event and moved backwards to how we got there.- Observer
- Posted Apr 4, 2019
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- Oliver Jones
It is a visually enthralling, high-gloss commercial for state power and repressive constructs. This is a product precisely tooled to be what the global marketplace demands of entertainment that is this expensive to make—a win for capitalism that will leave many filmgoers who found a powerful reflection of themselves in the original film feeling like they’ve lost something important and essential.- Observer
- Posted Sep 3, 2020
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- Oliver Jones
Holy Spider, a grungy Persian noir from Tehran-born and Copenhagen-based filmmaker Ali Abbasi, celebrates the humanity of that killer’s victims, and of Iranian women in general. It also shines a harsh and unforgiving light on a patriarchal society that refuses to do the same.- Observer
- Posted Oct 27, 2022
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- Oliver Jones
They came in fleeting glances, befuddled smiles and odd-timed pauses that the iconic pair share with each other before the movie shuffles them from one frenzied and inconsequential story beat to the next. In such stolen moments, you sense the depth of a friendship so profoundly felt and so deeply comforting that you think to yourself, I would follow these guys anywhere.- Observer
- Posted Aug 27, 2020
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