For 372 reviews, this critic has graded:
  • 78% higher than the average critic
  • 2% same as the average critic
  • 20% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 17.1 points higher than other critics. (0-100 point scale)

Eric Kohn's Scores

  • Movies
Average review score: 76
Highest review score:
Critic Score 100
Lowest review score:
Critic Score 25
Score distribution:
  1. Negative: 8 out of 372
372 movie reviews
    • Metascore: 80
    • Eric Kohn 100
    Melancholia hovers in ambiguity with riveting aesthetic prowess.
    • Metascore: 85
    • Eric Kohn 100
    Reichardt crafts a highly textured narrative that both invokes the mythology of the American frontier and cleverly transcends it.
    • Metascore: 87
    • Eric Kohn 100
    The magic of Uncle Boonmee is that it makes all viewers feel like the strange ones.
    • Metascore: 78
    • Eric Kohn 100
    The excitement in The Soft Skin, however, gives way to an intense tragedy that's INFORMED by the thrills.
    • Metascore: 88
    • Eric Kohn 100
    The cumulative impact of The Arbor is one of claustrophobia; at times, the endlessly downbeat adventures of Dunbar and her offspring grow almost unbearably morose.
    • Metascore: 61
    • Eric Kohn 100
    The Troll Hunter offers high-caliber entertainment despite a low-budget production.
    • Metascore: 85
    • Eric Kohn 100
    As with "Shotgun Stories," Nichols assembles a tense portrait of blue-collar life, while deepening his thematic interests and working on a bigger scale. Burrowing into the subconscious of a damaged man, he delivers a modern American epic with extraordinary restraint.
    • Metascore: 95
    • Eric Kohn 100
    It's a frantic microcosm of life itself.
    • Metascore: 95
    • Eric Kohn 100
    Bigelow delivers an acute realization of the mission's execution that's eerily in sync with the way it played in the popular imagination. Visually, the events unfold as a mashup of shadowy movements with flashes of green night vision. It's simultaneously predictable and tense.
    • Metascore: 74
    • Eric Kohn 100
    The beautiful desolation of Bombay Beach makes it difficult to describe as a documentary. Alma Har'el's directorial debut takes a nonfiction setting and displays its haunting qualities in poetic terms.
    • Metascore: 75
    • Eric Kohn 100
    Despite the ongoing momentum, Sleepless Night never loses touch with its story.
    • Metascore: 55
    • Eric Kohn 100
    Most segments have a fair share of cheap scares, but they also delve into the art of the build-up, as if delivering a series of grim jokes with bloody punchlines. Consider it a 21st-century take on "Tales from the Crypt."
    • Metascore: 82
    • Eric Kohn 100
    Ornette isn't just a love letter to the liberty of jazz rhythms; it excels at expressing them.
    • Metascore: 86
    • Eric Kohn 100
    The movie's stakes are alternately personal and political, but Petzold's skill truly comes into focus in the tense climax, when those two aims come together with a powerful act of defiance.
    • Metascore: 95
    • Eric Kohn 100
    Before Midnight is the rare cinematic achievement that implicates alert viewers in its mission to understand the mysteries of intimate connections.
    • Metascore: 58
    • Eric Kohn 100
    Byington excels at turning the edict that time waits for no one into a sensory experience. No matter how sly it gets, Somebody Up There Likes Me still retains that fundamental truth.
    • Metascore: 93
    • Eric Kohn 100
    Stories We Tell marks the finest of Polley's filmmaking skills by blending intimacy and intrigue to remarkable effect.
    • Metascore: 95
    • Eric Kohn 100
    Taking its time to let the world take shape, Short Term 12 builds to an involving series of mini-climaxes without tidying up every loose end.
    • Metascore: 90
    • Eric Kohn 100
    Heinzerling's beautifully shot, painfully intimate look at the aging couple's struggle to survive amid personal and financial strain is both heartbreaking and intricately profound. This is a story about creative desire so strong it hurts.
    • Metascore: 74
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Suleiman's most poignant moments are largely wordless. Nothing feels more affecting than Suleiman's ubiquitous frozen stare. Although he never utters a sound, his silence speaks volumes about the inability to resolve the social ramifications of Middle Eastern strife.
    • Metascore: 74
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Showcases Jones' ability to provide ample entertainment value with sharply drawn characters in a minimalist setting.
    • Metascore: 85
    • Eric Kohn 91
    More meditation than movie, Terrence Malick's The Tree of Life is bound to mystify, awe and exasperate in equal measures.
    • Metascore: 89
    • Eric Kohn 91
    It may go without saying that Poetry adopts a lyrical tone, but this forms the crux of its appeal. In this case, the title says it all.
    • Metascore: 78
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Unable to express the sorrow of Cory's passing or the larger sense of detachment from the world it represents, most of the people in Putty Hill try to remain disaffected. By pestering them with questions, Porterfield gets under their skin - and, in the process, ours as well.
    • Metascore: 81
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Mills fashions the set-up for an overwrought, thoroughly depressing character study into an oddly charming comedy. It's a midlife crisis gently portrayed with sympathy rather than grief.
    • Metascore: 86
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Ignore the precise religious context and it stands perfectly well as a restrained look at personal convictions in the face of certain death.
    • Metascore: 76
    • Eric Kohn 91
    In the movie's final shot, Jung's confidence crumbles and he looks supremely troubled, still uncertain of a world he once believed could be explained with textual prowess. Better than any analysis, his expression sums up the dangerous method at the heart of every Cronenberg movie.
    • Metascore: 84
    • Eric Kohn 91
    The Descendants constantly hovers on the brink of a dark comedy. But it never takes the big plug. By treading carefully, Payne has created his warmest, most earnest work, if not his best.
    • Metascore: 68
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Although Madsen's survey of warning strategies has an aimless structure prone to repetition, he creates an effective mood that transcends his time-travel gimmick and eventually becomes topical.
    • Metascore: 85
    • Eric Kohn 91
    I had to see the new version twice to realize that there's so much to appreciate about this multilayered production.
    • Metascore: 82
    • Eric Kohn 91
    A comedy of remarriage buried in intellectual abstraction and cinephilic obsessions, Certified Copy wanders a bit but never loses focus, with the only certainty being that its gimmick is genuine.
    • Metascore: 72
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Never indulging in outright scare tactics or loose improvisation, the movie primarily works like an awkward narrative that plays with perspective.
    • Metascore: 65
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Representing lower-class violence taken to an extreme, the cannibalism cannot be contained by police work. The movie's gradual build to a thrilling, appropriately bloody climax intensifies this disconnect.
    • Metascore: 63
    • Eric Kohn 91
    The first-time director's refreshingly credible portrait of a boho character with Middle Eastern origins rectifies the aforementioned canonical gap in a witty, naturalistic generational snapshot.
    • Metascore: 68
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Potiche successfully satirizes the gender politics at its core. At the same time, it knowingly mocks the obsession over debates about the suppression of women that pervaded the culture during the movie's setting.
    • Metascore: 68
    • Eric Kohn 91
    To Die Like a Man deserves your attention for showcasing a filmmaker with the capacity for bold narrative trickery that doesn't come at the expense of emotional investment.
    • Metascore: 86
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Herzog naturally plays up the enigma at hand with epic grandeur, occasionally overdoing it but usually hitting the mark.
    • Metascore: 80
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Frammartino keeps the material engaging simply by aiming the camera at his subjects and letting the material organically emerge-rather than enforcing the supernatural element with overstatement.
    • Metascore: 73
    • Eric Kohn 91
    With its persistent inventiveness and a lack of unearned sentimentality, the movie provides an antidote to a lot of lazily produced dramas about death, American or otherwise.
    • Metascore: 87
    • Eric Kohn 91
    The visual collage retains a consistent melancholy, resulting in an experience that's both deeply affecting and-since José never actually appears on-camera-utterly detached.
    • Metascore: 81
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Greene's patient, understated portrait renders a universal rite of passage in strangely alluring, poetic terms.
    • Metascore: 72
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Jacobs, working from a script by Patrick de Witt, takes a conventional coming-of-age story and does it proud, enlivening the plot with an almost experimental portrait of alienation and despair.
    • Metascore: 76
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Like "Afterschool," Durkin's first feature explores the dangerous extremes of youth vulnerability.
    • Metascore: 67
    • Eric Kohn 91
    By favoring mood over plot, "Myth" explores what it feels like to transition into youth adulthood and face harsher truths.
    • Metascore: 64
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Film Socialism is a weighty, intentionally cryptic product that's easy on the eyes and heavy on the mind.
    • Metascore: 86
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Steve James's The Interrupters runs long, but earns its heft.
    • Metascore: 81
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Weekend builds into a powerful encapsulation of an identity crisis over the course of three passionate days.
    • Metascore: 82
    • Eric Kohn 91
    With its bouncy soundtrack, deadpan humor and good-natured disposition, Finnish director Aki Kaurismaki's Le Havre is an endearing affair.
    • Metascore: 80
    • Eric Kohn 91
    In each tense moment, Miss Bala has a lot to say in a few words.
    • Metascore: 73
    • Eric Kohn 91
    American action movies are almost entirely defined by cutaways, blaring music cues and grunts. The Raid: Redemption, a hyper-energetic Indonesian martial arts movie, delivers an effective rebuke to that meek norm. Bones break, blood flows and swift, excessively complicated fight choreography puts virtually everything released in North America since "The Bourne Ultimatum" to instant shame.
    • Metascore: 100
    • Eric Kohn 91
    An ode to art for art's sake, Inside Llewyn Davis is the most innocent movie of the Coens' career, which in their case is a downright radical achievement.
    • Metascore: 71
    • Eric Kohn 91
    The measured vérité style of Frederick Wiseman meets the visual polish of Terrence Malick in Dragonslayer, a fascinating slice of crude Americana from first-time director Tristan Patterson. However, it stands alone with an infectious hard rock attitude.
    • Metascore: 70
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Rampart is co-written by crime writer James Ellroy as a messy, disorienting noir, and shot by cinematographer Bobby Bukowski with an unsettling degree of realism.
    • Metascore: 81
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Incredibly heartfelt to a large degree because of its cast.
    • Metascore: 82
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Nuri Bilge Ceylan's mesmerizing Once Upon a Time in Anatolia plays like "Zodiac" meets "Police, Adjective."
    • Metascore: 64
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Imagine "Harold and Maude" directed by Eric Rohmer with shades of film noir and doused in philosophical chatter enhanced by ample white wine. But Domain isn't pure formula, because the subversion of expectations is its centerpiece.
    • Metascore: 81
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Possibly the best war movie of the year.
    • Metascore: 72
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Duplass' feisty energy is matched by DeWitt's constant smarminess, while Blunt's shy, fragile behavior balances off the forceful personalities surrounding her.
    • Metascore: 66
    • Eric Kohn 91
    A less controlled and slapdash character piece than "In Bruge," McDonagh's new movie benefits greatly from a plethora of one-liners that toy with crime movie clichés in the unlikely context of writerly obsessions.
    • Metascore: 67
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Kazan has fun with a silly premise and smartly plays it straight when the occasion calls for it, while keeping the cutesy, fantastical extremes of the material at bay. It's less fairy tale than shrewd exaggeration on the pratfalls of desire.
    • Metascore: 80
    • Eric Kohn 91
    I Wish embraces blissful ignorance, even celebrating its child characters' naivete.
    • Metascore: 55
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Extraterrestrial can be forgiven the tangents into melodrama due to Vigalondo's seamless ability to navigate those soapy waters.
    • Metascore: 62
    • Eric Kohn 91
    For American audiences, each gag has added appeal because it contains an uneasy humor that's often explored but never fully exploited in these parts.
    • Metascore: 74
    • Eric Kohn 91
    The movie is an impressively realized work of minimalist storytelling that foregrounds Redford's physicality more than any other role in his celebrated career. His performance defines the movie to an almost shockingly experimental degree.
    • Metascore: 61
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Nobody else could fit the role of a crestfallen rocker that Paul Dano embodies in director So Yong Kim's remarkable For Ellen.
    • Metascore: 81
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Sister may not arrive at a happy ending, but the lack of resolution -- capped off by the powerful last image --completes its journey to a place of rousing emotional clarity.
    • Metascore: 84
    • Eric Kohn 91
    There's no doubting that Holy Motors is an ungodly mess of images and moments, some more alluring than others, but it sure leaves a mark.
    • Metascore: 76
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Suspense is rarely delivered with such distinctive patience.
    • Metascore: 58
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Hyams delivers a remarkably satisfying action-thriller hybrid that constantly pushes ahead. It's one of the best action movies of the year simply because it keeps hitting the right beats.
    • Metascore: 94
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Although not exactly heartwarming, Amour has a more contained vision of human relationships than Haneke's previous films without sacrificing its bleak foundation. It's his most conventional movie about death -- and the most poignant.
    • Metascore: 68
    • Eric Kohn 91
    That the movie succeeds both as a high-stakes crime thriller as well as a far quieter and empathetic study of angry, solitary men proves that Cianfrance has a penchant for bold storytelling and an eye for performances to carry it through.
    • Metascore: 79
    • Eric Kohn 91
    With an editing approach that seamlessly blends past and present, Central Park Five contains a fluid, engaging storytelling that does away with the dry voiceover commentary and theatrical music choices that typically account for the narrative flow of most Burns films.
    • Metascore: 69
    • Eric Kohn 91
    A viscerally charged movie that foregrounds surface tensions and gripping performances, Ginger and Rosa is the filmmaker's most accessible and technically surefooted work to date.
    • Metascore: 69
    • Eric Kohn 91
    In Another Country is a paragon of any given Hong movie's intrinsic charms, and yet it also manages to break from the pattern by including an English-speaking character as one of its leads.
    • Metascore: 63
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Dickinson's hauntingly naturalistic look at disgruntled young adults trapped in the country following an urban disaster plays like "Martha Marcy May Marlene" transported to a post-apocalyptic survival narrative -- with lots of yoga and sex.
    • Metascore: 66
    • Eric Kohn 91
    It's an unflinching update to media scholar Neil Postman's prophetic claim about the deadly impact of television on cultural identity: Smartphones in hand, we face the danger of filming ourselves to death.
    • Metascore: 81
    • Eric Kohn 91
    At times, Frances Ha strains from emphasizing the characters' snarkiness and disregarding plot. By routinely going nowhere, however, the movie eventually finds a distinctive voice that carries it through.
    • Metascore: 81
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Whereas "45365" took the form of a scattered collage, with disconnected events and a vast ensemble of characters stitched together to represent a year of activity, Tchoupitalas brings greater clarity to a similarly diffuse canvas by situating it around a trio of innocent observers.
    • Metascore: 80
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Upstream Color is routinely confusing but not oppressively so; its final exquisite moments explain little yet still manage to invite you in.
    • Metascore: 67
    • Eric Kohn 91
    It's incredibly uneventful and devastating all at once.
    • Metascore: 63
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Atmospherically, Spring Breakers is an elegant evocation of noir storytelling, littered with misdeeds with girls and guns at every turn.
    • Metascore: 63
    • Eric Kohn 91
    With a dense, often impermeable style and a mentally unstable protagonist, Simon Killer is like watching the disturbed anti-hero of "Afterschool" all grown up.
    • Metascore: 65
    • Eric Kohn 91
    This could be a recipe for excessive self-indulgence, but the meta quality of Red Flag is entirely irrelevant to its low key charm and persistent irreverence -- anchored, as always, by Karpovsky's loopy screen presence.
    • Metascore: 76
    • Eric Kohn 91
    The reality-show aesthetic pervades the movie as well. Garrone's roaming camera style draws you into each moment with extreme close-ups and long takes that wander through each scene and get lost in it. Luciano's plight is crushing because Garrone renders it with such detail.
    • Metascore: 83
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Xavier Dolan's I Killed My Mother marks the emergence of an exciting new filmmaking talent. The Montreal actor, a mere 20 years old, displays a startlingly mature perspective on human behavior in his triple threat position as writer-director-star.
    • Metascore: 92
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Playing make believe with murderers, Oppenheimer risks the possibility of empowering them. However, by humanizing psychopathic behavior, The Act of Killing is unparalleled in its unsettling perspective on the dementias associated with dictatorial extremes.
    • Metascore: 73
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Kim's movies are generally grim, disturbing affairs, but "Pieta" leaves much to the imagination in favor of its unsettling implications.
    • Metascore: 71
    • Eric Kohn 91
    While not designed to entertain on the level of style and spectacle that one expects from a Bond film, this tense period drama from the director of "Man on Wire" presents a far more credible take on the daring exploits of British agents.
    • Metascore: 62
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Computer Chess excels at conveying the frustrations of feeling trapped by forces beyond one's control, the complexities of humanity irresolvable by any neat code.
    • Metascore: 68
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Swanberg once again shows a capacity for capturing small moments that exist outside the direction of the plot. At the same time, the effective fragments of "Drinking Buddies" take his oeuvre in a new direction by accumulating into a reworking big picture.
    • Metascore: 67
    • Eric Kohn 91
    Smart in spite of its irreverence, "Future Folk" is the weirdest, most enjoyable fusion of genres you'll see this year.
    • Metascore: 68
    • Eric Kohn 83
    Cold-blooded killers rarely look this pathetic, which testifies to the impressive balance of SkarsgÄrd's amusingly low-key performance.
    • Metascore: 65
    • Eric Kohn 83
    The resulting adrenaline-packed vehicle delivers a multi-directional sugar rush. It moves so quickly that the bells and whistles blur together.
    • Metascore: 67
    • Eric Kohn 83
    Pummeling forward from its first diner-set fight scene to a sweeping final showdown on the beach, Haywire is a literal blast.
    • Metascore: 58
    • Eric Kohn 83
    Transitioning back into a scripted dynamic after his quasi-documentary performance excursions with "Bruno" and "Borat," Baron Cohen loses none of his edge, combining slapstick inspiration and social commentary into a hilariously provocative blend.
    • Metascore: 70
    • Eric Kohn 83
    Helms plays angelic insurance agent Tim Lippe with gentle nobility and hilarious naivete.
    • Metascore: 72
    • Eric Kohn 83
    Creepy implications keep Super 8 engaging, but the cast makes it click.