sun 25/05/2025

Film Reviews

Oscars 2021: Sluggish, yes, but some surprises too

Matt Wolf

“God gave us 12 notes,” said Jon Batiste as he accepted the Best Score Oscar for the animated film Soul.

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Black Bear review - unexpected knotty treat

Owen Richards

We’ve all experienced the “fast food film” – enjoyable while we watch it, but realise afterwards it was an empty thrill with little nutritional value. Much rarer is the film that can only be truly appreciated once the credits roll. Black Bear, with its segmented presentation and recurring themes, is one such film. Risky, baffling, and more than the sum of its parts.

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Promising Young Woman, Sky Cinema review - Emerald Fennell's brilliant directorial debut

Adam Sweeting

After winning a couple of Baftas, and with five nominations at next week’s Oscars, Promising Young Woman comes surging in on the crest of a wave.

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Citizen Lane review - fascinating dramadoc about Irish arts benefactor

Veronica Lee

On first sight, Citizen Lane's appeal may seem limited to those with an Irish connection or an interest in fine art.

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True Mothers review - how many people does it take to raise a child?

Markie Robson-Scott

On the 30th floor of a Tokyo apartment building, a charming little boy brushes his teeth, watched over by his smiling mother who sings to him gently. He’s full of joy - today his dad’s coming with them on the walk to nursery school. The little family of three walk out together. All seems well – too well - in their comfortable, quiet world.

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Night in Paradise review - lukewarm bloodbath

Tom Baily

Since launching his directing career in 2011 with The Showdown, Park Hoon-jung has established himself as a promising devotee of the bloody gangster genre. The pandemic may have slowed the South Korean director’s momentum, as the producers were forced to release the film belatedly on Netflix.

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Sequin in a Blue Room review - soullessness and sex in Sydney

Matt Wolf

Sequin is the screen name for the questing 16-year-old at the slowly awakening heart of Sequin in a Blue Room, a 2019 Australian film only now reaching the UK.

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Sound of Metal review - hidden depths behind the decibels

Adam Sweeting

I once went to see Motorhead, back in the days when real men didn’t wear earplugs, and afterwards it was if somebody had completely sawn off the top half of my hearing register. Weird and scary, and the band were putting themselves through that every night.

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Undine review - respecting the nymph

Graham Fuller

Illogical in its twists and turns, elusive as a fading dream but not stylistically dreamy – Christian Petzold’s optimistic romantic tragedy Undine is a ciné-conundrum par excellence.

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Wilderness review – 'what comes after besotted?'

Sebastian Scotney

Wilderness has close-ups. And intimacy. And glorious empty beaches. A couple – John (James Barnes) and Alice (Katharine Davenport) – first meet outside the back door of a jazz club. They become completely infatuated with each other. We see them heading off to a seaside cottage in a 1960s Volvo sports car.

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Godzilla vs. Kong review - let battle commence (again)

Saskia Baron

All is harmony as another day breaks in paradise. Kong yawns and stretches luxuriously, his furry brown musculature surely paying homage to Burt Reynolds’ iconic yet discreet Playgirl centrefold. Bobby Vinton croons Over the Seas over invisible speakers as the giant ape showers in a waterfall. If only Godzilla vs.

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The Drifters review - lovers-on-the-run with little moral depth

Tom Baily

The Drifters remakes the romance crime genre by placing the main themes of rebellion and freedom in the context of the race and migration divisions of present day Britain. It is a noble mission for a debut by British director Benjamin Bond.

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The Mauritanian review – moving 9/11 drama

Demetrios Matheou

Whether he’s making documentaries or dramas, director Kevin Macdonald has an eye for the bleak moments in our history, and a dynamic way of recreating them, from the Oscar-winning doc Four Days in September, about the Munich massacre, to the fictionalised account of the Ugandan dictator Idi Amin, The Last King of Scotland, which at times played like a horror film.

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Memories of My Father review - the richness of childhood, the cruelty of history

Tom Birchenough

Spanish director Fernando Trueba’s Memories of My Father adapts the Colombian writer Héctor Abad Faciolince’s 2006 family memoir, which was published in English as Oblivion: the Spanish-...

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Stray review - a delightful portrait of a dog named Zeytin

Sarah Kent

It’s a dog’s life, this lockdown; if only I could meet my friends whenever I want to and roam around freely without obeying these annoying restrictions! 

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Six Minutes to Midnight review - Judi Dench retains her dignity

Matt Wolf

It can't be easy maintaining dignity when everyone in your vicinity is losing theirs. But that's the position in which the inimitable Judi Dench finds herself in Six Minutes to Midnight, a bewildering movie in which star and co-author, Eddie Izzard, spends a lot of time running hither and yon even as the film itself refuses to budge.

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