• Home
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Lists
    • Yearly Top Tens
    • Trailers
Menu

World of Reel

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
Home
IMG_1175.jpeg
Ethan Hawke: “I Don’t Think Paul Dano Ever Knew So Many People Loved Him"
IMG_1172.jpeg
‘Sinners’ Mob Targets More Critics; Pushback Over Variety’s Year-End List Snub
Screenshot 2025-12-11 134241.png
‘47 Ronin’ Director Carl Rinsch Found Guilty of Scamming Netflix Out of $11M
IMG_1156.jpeg
Scarlett Johansson Plays A “Rookie Detective” in Mike Flanagan’s ‘The Exorcist: Martyrs’
IMG_1155.jpeg
‘Supergirl' Trailer is Released
Featured
Capture.PNG
Aug 19, 2019
3-Hour ‘Midsommar' Director's Cut Screened in NYC
Aug 19, 2019

This year’s 12th edition of the Scary Movies festival at Film at Lincoln Center premiered Ari Aster’s extended version of “Midsommar” this past Saturday.

Aug 19, 2019

World of Reel

  • Home
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Lists
  • More
    • Yearly Top Tens
    • Trailers

‘Mank’ Continues to Underwhelm Me ...

December 6, 2020 Jordan Ruimy

David Fincher’s “Mank” is now available to stream on Netflix. You can read my mixed-to-positive review, dated 11.12.20. Since then, I’ve given “Mank” a few more shots, but still cannot fully come around to its coldly detaching frames. The technical mastery is one thing, but the story left me cold and uninvolved. This was a bold movie to make for Fincher, but it lacks the stylistic stamp of his other films and feels more like a passion project -- his father wrote the screenplay back in 1993.

I am so utterly disappointed by my lack of enthusiasm for this film, which was my most anticipated of 2020, that I am willing to give it another shot, a fourth viewing, in the coming week. Fincher is such a great visualist, and his peering inside the mind of the genius Herman Mankiewicz —filled with innumerable alcoholic blackouts and illuminating discoveries— feels so out of step with 2020, but something tells me it’ll play better over time. That’s why my frustrating grappling with this movie is a losing battle, for the time being.

“Mank” develops quite well Mankiewicz as a character, albeit a static one completely out of step with the hivemind around him. He’s an engaging protagonist, but one lacking the ripple effects needed to enhance the narrative and the cast of characters around him. The characterization is not especially interesting when compared to the massive stakes at hand (the makings of the “greatest movie of all-time). Of course, the subject of the film is, in essence, about the set of events that would inspire the making of “Citizen Kane” and “Mank” tries to do that in the style of Welles’ film; in black and white, using a cinnamon-rolled, and flashback-induced story. However, in “Citizen Kane” we get numerous opinions (and thus a multi-facetted portrait) of Charles Foster Kane. In “Mank” we see all the action through the eyes of Herman Mankiewicz himself and that results in a less hefty movie.

← ’Nomadland’ Chloe Zhao’s Docu-Fiction Venice Winner [Review] Warner Bros. Set to Premiere These 20 Movies on HBO Max Next Year →

FOLLOW US!


Trending

Featured
IMG_0351.webp
Josh Safdie’s ‘Marty Supreme’ is One of the Best Films of the Year — Timothée Chalamet Has Never Been Better
IMG_0815.jpeg
Six-Minute Prologue of Christopher Nolan’s ‘The Odyssey’ Coming to Select IMAX 70mm Screenings December 12
IMG_0711.jpeg
James Cameron: Netflix Movies Shouldn’t Be Eligible for Oscars
IMG_0685.jpeg
Brady Corbet Confirms Untitled 4-Hour Western Will Be X-Rated, Shot in 70mm, Filming Next Summer

Critics Polls

Featured
Capture.PNG
Critics Poll: ‘Vertigo’ Named Best Film of the 1950s, Over 120 Participants
B16BAC21-5652-44F6-9E83-A1A5C5DF61D7.jpeg
Critics Poll: Kubrick’s ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ Tops Our 1960s Critics Poll
Capture.PNG
Critics Poll: ‘The Godfather’ Named Best Movie of the 1970s
public.jpeg
Critics Poll: ‘Do the Right Thing' Named Best Movie of the 1980s
World of Reel tagline.PNG
 

Content

Contribute

Hire me

 

Support

Advertise

Donate

 

About

Team

Contact

Privacy Policy

Site designed by Jordan Ruimy © 2025