Latest – Page 13
-
Reviews
‘Five Nights At Freddy’s’: Review
Lacklustre horror based on the popular video game is a rare artistic misfire for Blumhouse
-
Reviews
‘Leave The World Behind’: AFI Fest Review
Julia Roberts, Mahershala Ali and Ethan Hawke star in Sam Esmail’s effective dystopian thriller
-
-
Reviews
‘All Dirt Roads Taste Of Salt’: London Review
Raven Jackson’s feature debut is a patchwork of Tennessee memories produced by Barry Jenkins
-
Reviews
‘Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour’: Review
Another format, another smash for beloved pop icon Taylor Swift
-
Reviews
‘The Book Of Clarence’: London Review
Jeymes Samuel returns to the Biblical epics of yore with this rambunctious faith film
-
Reviews
‘The Pigeon Tunnel’: London Review
Errol Morris talks with John LeCarre in the late author’s last, no-holds-barred interview
-
Reviews
‘The Exorcist: Believer’: Review
The first in a planned new Exorcist trilogy from director David Gordon Green fails to live up to its legacy
-
-
Reviews
‘Ex-Husbands’: San Sebastian Review
Griffin Dunne and James Norton star in this wry, accessible comedy of male melancholy
-
Reviews
‘NYAD’: Toronto Review
Annette Bening goes the distance as real life endurance swimmer Diana Nyad
-
Reviews
‘Wildcat’: Toronto Review
Ethan Hawke directs his daughter Maya Hawke as Southern Gothic writer Flannery O’Connor
-
Reviews
‘Fingernails’: Toronto Review
Jessie Buckley and Riz Ahmed fight the laws of attraction in this near-future set drama in which love is a science
-
Reviews
‘The Burial’: Toronto Review
Jamie Foxx and Tommy Lee Jones are the odd couple of flashy lawyer and small town client in this mid-90s set crowdpleaser
-
Reviews
‘The Holdovers’: Toronto Review
Alexander Payne reunites with his ‘Sideways’ star Paul Giamatti for this wistful 1970-set character study
-
Reviews
‘Sorry/Not Sorry’: Toronto Review
Louis CK documentary reveals the deadly serious abusive underbelly of the US comedy circuit
-
Reviews
‘Pain Hustlers’: Toronto Review
Emily Blunt shines in this otherwise muted true-life tale of a corrupt American pharmaceutical company
-
Reviews
‘Rustin’: Toronto Review
Colman Domingo plays the man behind the March on Washington - who found himself sidelined because he was gay
-
Reviews
‘Next Goal Wins’: Toronto Review
Michael Fassbender stars in Taika Waititi’s crowdpleasing underdog sporting drama set in American Samoa
-
Reviews
‘His Three Daughters’: Toronto Review
Carrie Coon, Natasha Lyonne and Elizabeth Olsen are Azazel Jacobs’ three sisters gathered for the death of their father in a New York Apartment