tue 30/09/2025

Film Reviews

Calm with Horses review - a stirring debut

Saskia Baron

Nick Rowland marks his breakout from TV drama with this very competent feature, an adaptation of Colin Barrett’s short story.

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Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am review - a fitting tribute to a masterful storyteller

Joseph Walsh

When the Nobel Prize-winning author Toni Morrison died last year, it was a chance to celebrate the remarkable life of a storyteller who shook the literary establishment. Her work, including her debut novel The Bluest Eye, broke radical new ground in depicting African American life.

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Misbehaviour review - crowd-pleaser tackles Seventies sexism

Joseph Walsh

Created in the mould of Made in Dagenham and Pride, Philippa Lowthrope offers up a cheery, kitschy British comedy centred around the 1970 Miss World Contest that was disrupted by feminist protests.&nbsp

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And Then We Danced review - glorious Georgian gay coming-of-age tale

Tom Birchenough

The final sequence of Levan Akin’s coming-of-age drama And Then We Danced is as gloriously defiant a piece of dance action as anything you’ll remember falling for in Billy Elliot.

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Onward review - do you believe in magic?

Jill Chuah Masters

Welcome to New Mushroomton: a fantasy land that’s forgotten itself. This is how we’re introduced to Pixar’s Onward, which is set in a Dungeons & Dragons daydream of suburbia. Director Dan Scanlon’s film is a tribute to his late father, but it begins with a separate elegy.

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The Photograph review - star-powered romance mostly simmers, sometimes soars

Jill Chuah Masters

The Photograph, from writer-director Stella Meghie, tells twin tales. The first is all flashback and follows Christine (Chanté Adams, pictured below with Y'lan Noel), a young photographer balancing love and ambition.

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Military Wives review - the surprising true story of the women who rocked the charts

Joseph Walsh

There’s a lot of plucky British charm to Military Wives, from Peter Cattaneo, the director who won the nation's heart with his debut film The Full Monty over two decades ago.

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Escape from Pretoria review - fun but facile prison-break drama

Adam Sweeting

Based on the book by former political prisoner Tim Jenkin, Escape from Pretoria is an intermittently engaging jailbreak tale set in South Africa’s apartheid regime in the 1970s, as well as further evidence of Daniel Radcliffe’s determination to run as far as possible in the opposite direction from his past life as Harry Potter. Its only problem is a troubling case of schizophrenia, since it’s not sure whether to be a pared-down thriller or a political statement.

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True History of the Kelly Gang review - anarchy in Oz

Nick Hasted

“Nothing you’re about to see is true,” this adaptation of Peter Carey’s novel about Australia’s iron-clad Victorian outlaw Ned Kelly declares.

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Downhill review - American remake wanders off-piste

Markie Robson-Scott

It’s hard to believe that Jesse Armstrong (Succession, Veep) co-wrote the screenplay for this feeble American remake of Swedish director Ruben Ostlund’s Force Majeure (2014).

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Portrait of a Lady on Fire review – love unshackled

Graham Fuller

Portrait of a Lady on Fire is windblown, spare, taut, and sensual – a haunted seaside romantic drama, set in the 18th century, that makes most recent films and series dressed in period costumes seem like party-line effusions of empty style and social conservatism (Gentleman Jack excepted).

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Berlinale 2020: Never Rarely Sometimes Always review - raw and unflinching abortion drama hits home

Joseph Walsh

Back in 2017, writer-director Eliza Hittman won over audiences with her beautiful coming-of-age drama Beach Rats.

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Dark Waters review - an ominous drama with plenty of backbone, but not enough flesh

Jill Chuah Masters

Watching Dark Waters, the latest film from director Todd Haynes (Carol, Far from Heaven), I kept thinking — what’s the opposite of a love letter? The film is based on the work of Rob Bilott, a real-life lawyer who uncovered a corruption scandal so toxic that it was literally poisoning us.

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Berlinale 2020: Berlin Alexanderplatz review - a contemporary twist on a classic

Joseph Walsh

Burhan Qurbani isn’t the first director to bring Alfred Döblin’s seminal 1929 novelBerlin Alexanderplatz, to the screen. First, there was the Weimar Republic era adaptation that Döblin himself worked on. Fifty years later, Rainer Werner Fassbinder brought us his 15-hour television opus.

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Push review – lifting the lid on the housing crisis

Sarah Kent

Italian journalist Roberto Saviano still lives in fear of his life 11 years after writing Gomorrah, which explores how criminal gangs use tax havens to launder money. “You make 100 million euros from trafficking cocaine or migrants,” he explains, “and you buy restaurants, hotels and houses legally, sell them to your offshore company then buy them back at a much higher price.” 

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Berlinale 2020: My Salinger Year review - 70th edition of the festival opens in style

Joseph Walsh

There’s an undeniable romance to mid-Nineties New York. Absent of the chirp of mobile phones, or the swirl of social media, it comes across as a more halcyon age, closer to the Forties than the Noughties.

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