
Adam Mars-Jones
Explore the best Adam Mars-Jones movies ranked by Movie Rankings users. Browse biography, ranked filmography, and movie detail links for Adam Mars-Jones.
Adam Mars-Jones (born 26 October 1954) is a British novelist and literary and film critic. Mars-Jones was born in London, to Sir William Mars-Jones (1915–1999), a Welsh High Court judge, and Sheila Cobon (1923–1998), an attorney, daughter of Charles Cobon, a marine engineer. Mars-Jones attended Westminster School, and studied English at Trinity Hall, Cambridge. Mars-Jones is a regular contributor to The Guardian, The Observer, The Times Literary Supplement, and the London Review of Books. He also participated in BBC Television's Newsnight Review. His first collection of stories, Lantern Lecture (1981), won a Somerset Maugham Award. In 1983, he edited the collection Mae West Is Dead: Recent Lesbian and Gay Fiction. His own short fiction was collected in The Darker Proof: Stories from a Crisis (1987), co-written with Edmund White, and in Monopolies of Loss (1992); both works address the AIDS crisis. His essay "Venus Envy", a polemic against Martin Amis, was originally published in the CounterBlasts series in 1990. Mars-Jones' first novel, The Waters of Thirst, was published in 1993. His second novel, Pilcrow (2008), was followed by two sequels, Cedilla (2011) and Caret (2023), which together form the first three volumes of a projected series. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2007. Noriko Smiling, a book concerning the Yasujirō Ozu-directed film Late Spring, was published in 2011. In 2012, he was awarded the inaugural Hatchet Job of the Year Award for his review of Michael Cunningham's By Nightfall. On 2 January 2015, Mars-Jones was captain of the winning team on the television quiz show Christmas University Challenge, representing Trinity Hall, Cambridge, who defeated Balliol College, Oxford, the University of Edinburgh and the University of Hull. His teammates were international rower Tom James, world champion cyclist Emma Pooley and actor Dan Starkey. Mars-Jones' 1997 "Blind Bitter Happiness" re-tells the difficult life of his mother and his relationship to her. His memoir Kid Gloves: A Voyage Round My Father (2015) deals with his father's struggle to come to terms with his son's homosexuality and his father's later slide into dementia in old age. Description above from the Wikipedia article Adam Mars-Jones, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
What is the best Adam Mars-Jones movie?
Movie Rankings is still collecting enough aggregate data to name a definitive top Adam Mars-Jones movie.
How many Adam Mars-Jones movies are ranked here?
This page tracks every ranked credit we currently have for Adam Mars-Jones, and expands as more titles and comparisons are added.
How often do Adam Mars-Jones rankings update?
These rankings refresh whenever Movie Rankings recomputes global results. This page was last generated from site data on May 12, 2026.
Sources & freshness
Last refreshed from site data on May 12, 2026.
