Supernova is a remarkable little film, highlighted by the beautiful chemistry between stars Colin Firth and Stanley Tucci.
Locked Down was definitely a surprise success, delivering unsuspecting nostalgia and examining the freedom of anarchy.
The Dig finds a good old tale of British excellence but never quite brings it to life failing to avoid trite pitfalls along the way.
The Ripper, the eponymous killer, and the series expose the misogyny with aplomb at every step and moreover, it is persistently captivating.
Though not without its flaws, Wonder Woman 1984 proves to be a worthy and striking follow-up to an already great prequel.
Despite its many strengths and successes, Education was the only Small Axe film that left me wanting more.
The crystal-clear visual spectacle is on full display, making this 4K Ultra HD Blu-Ray of Tenet comes highly recommended.
Alex Wheatle is yet another strong showing from Steve McQueen and company, and one that feels more personal than the rest.
A genuinely unusual movie that will elicit a genuinely unusual reaction, Wild Mountain Thyme is shockingly terrible.
“I’m sorry I’m late”, I say when I’m connected through to Karim Saleh. We’re here…
Fatman is an exhausting, vile, depressingly boring movie which might have been kinda funny as a skit or short.
Ammonite is a cold, distant viewing that rewards the viewer in sporadic intervals, confident that it will find the right audience.
Daryl MacDonald spoke with director Zeina Durra about her film Luxor, the city of Luxor itself to spirituality, dreams, accents, and more!
Luxor will reward that patience with a lovely, unsentimental look at life, which is well worth the price of admission.
Even if GoldenEye might not be the game-changing masterpiece that it could have been, it does play the Bond game well.