Category: Cinema


  • First Look Review: Imperium

    Film editor Hollie takes a look at Daniel Radcliffe in his most challenging role yet, playing an undercover FBI agent posing as a Neo-Nazi skinhead in ‘Imperium’.

  • Review: Don’t Breathe

    Writer Eddy reviews the relentlessly tense and shocking thriller, Don’t Breathe.

  • Review: The Beatles: Eight Days a Week

    Writer Sophie praises Ron Howard’s documentary feature, The Beatles: Eight Days a Week- The Touring Years

  • Review: One More Time With Feeling

    Harley James Mitford reviews Andrew Dominik’s intimate documentary about Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds.

  • Review: Childhood of a Leader

    Writer Tom Townend assesses Brady Corbet’s directorial debut that has finally arrived in the UK

  • First Look Review: Blair Witch

    In a terrifying return to the classic horror, Blair Witch revisits the evil thing that’s hiding in the woods. Writer Eddy reviews.

  • Review: Hell or High Water

    Writer Tash reviews the perfectly crafted and thoroughly entertaining Hell or High Water

  • Review: Anthropoid

    Writer Tash reviews Anthropoid, the World War Two drama based on a real story- a disappointing film but a story which needed to be told.

  • Review: Café Society

    David Mitchell-Baker reviews the latest film from writer/director Woody Allen.

  • First Look Review: Theo and Hugo

    Writer Harley reviews the brief, albeit touching love story about two French boys, Theo and Hugo.

  • First Look Review: Kubo and The Two Strings

    Writer Eddy reviews the latest release by Laika Entertainment, the fantastic Kubo and the Two Strings.

  • Review: Sausage Party

    Live editor Carly-May Kavanagh writes that the highly anticipated animated film, Sausage party, isn’t as great as audiences suggest.

  • Review: Morgan

    Writer Sophie reviews Luke Scott’s Morgan, a mesmerizing representation of abuse and human curiosity.

  • Review: Popstar: Never Stop, Never Stopping

    Though funny in some parts, The Lonely Island’s first feature film is mostly a disappointment according to writer Sophie Trenear.