X (2022) Review
Despite pacing issues and an unwillingness to engage with the time period, Mia Goth emerges as a star in Ti West’s X (2022). Review by Margaret Roarty.
Read MoreDespite pacing issues and an unwillingness to engage with the time period, Mia Goth emerges as a star in Ti West’s X (2022). Review by Margaret Roarty.
Read MoreSoft Colm Bairéad drama ‘The Quiet Girl’ (Irish: ‘An Cailín Ciúin’) is the first Irish film to ever be nominated for International Feature Film at the Oscars. Review by Sam Sewell-Peterson.
Read MoreIf you like deadpan delivery and surreal asides, you’ll have a great time with British mockumentary ‘Brian and Charles’ (2022), from David Earl and Chris Hayward. Review by Sam Sewell-Peterson.
Read MoreThe Sea Beast, the classic combination of adventure, humour, a smart-alec kid, a reluctant adult, animal sidekick and a heart-warming lesson to learn. Review by Martha Lane.
Read MoreThe dance numbers are a fantastic spectacle and the songs are catchy and funny in ‘Roald Dahl’s Matilda the Musical’ (2022), the live-action adaptation starring Emma Thompson. Review by Martha Lane.
Read MoreNoah Baumbach, the filmmaker behind ‘Marriage Story’, adapts Don DeLillo’s “White Noise” into a timely and darkly funny Netflix Original film starring Adam Driver. Review by Emi Grant.
Read MoreJames Cameron’s sequel thirteen years in the making, ‘Avatar: The Way of Water’ (2022), looks “absolutely gorgeous” but lacks the originality of the first ‘Avatar’. Review by Kieran Judge.
Read MoreCinema and Social Justice Project short film ‘Cost of Living’ (2022) is an emotive contextualisation of our contemporary struggle through archive footage. Review by Joseph Wade.
Read More‘Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio’ (2022) is a vivid and hard-hitting reimagining of a classic story, presented in stop-motion animation for Netflix. Review by Sam Sewell-Peterson.
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