Justin Chang is an American film critic for the Los Angeles Times.
Justin Chang grew up in Southern California and graduated from the University of Southern California. Chang first became interested in film critique while in high school because he found it fascinating that "two or three (or 40 or 50) intelligent people could watch a film and come away with completely different reactions to it."
Chang began his career as a film critic in 2010. He currently works for the Los Angeles Times, and is a regular contributor to "FilmWeek" and the NPR program Fresh Air. Previously, he was hired as an intern at Variety magazine in May 2004, and became a senior film critic for the magazine in 2010 before being promoted to its chief film critic in 2013. He is the author of the book FilmCraft: Editing. Chang is the chair of the National Society of Film Critics and the secretary of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. In 2014, he received the inaugural Roger Ebert Award from the African-American Film Critics Association.
While accepting the New Generation Award at the LA Film Critics awards ceremony in January 2016, American film director and screenwriter Ryan Coogler praised Chang for his contributions to criticism. Coogler recalled attending the Cannes Film Festival in 2009 as a student filmmaker scrounging tickets and spending his down time in the Variety tent, where a “crazy typing guy” caught his attention:
"I would see people coming in and out, working. But it was this guy, going crazy on his laptop, and he would run off, and then he’d come back and go crazy on his laptop, and he would run off. He looked different from everybody else in the room, because he was Asian. So I was thinking, ‘What’s this Asian dude doing in here, typing away on his laptop, crazy?’ He would type like a madman. He would type with a fury that I recognized, because that’s how I type — with passion, when I’m trying to get words out. One day I asked, and they said, ‘That’s Justin. He’s our critic.’ It was crazy, because I said, ‘Oh wow, this is the first time I’ve actually seen a critic work.’ I read reviews, I would see Siskel and Ebert on TV, I met critics’ studies majors at my school, but I’d never seen a critic do the work…. I always remembered that.