Best Films to Watch in London This Week
All the movies worth catching in the capital, from a charming Dickens adaptation to a mad classic restored in 4K...
Out and about this week? Fancy a film but can’t make your mind up what to see? Look no further: we’ve assembled the best of what’s showing in London and gathered them here to make choosing a great movie as easy as possible. Whatever you’re in the mood for, WeLoveCinema has you well and truly covered…
The Personal History of David Copperfield
Though best known for his work on satirical shows like The Thick of It and Veep, Armando Iannucci has laid the snark and irony aside for his latest film, The Personal History of David Copperfield, based on the beloved tale by Charles Dickens. It’s the sort of charming – and totally swear-free – adaptation that can only come from a life-long love of the source material. Yet in opting for a “colour-blind” approach to casting, Iannucci injects new life into an old classic, uniting Dev Patel (brilliantly charming as David) with a plethora of famous British faces, including Hugh Laurie, Ben Whishaw, Benedict Wong, Tilda Swinton, and Peter Capaldi. In a word: lovely.
Get The Personal History of David Copperfield showtimes in London or read our full review.
Just Mercy
This gripping and timely drama stars Michael B. Jordan of Black Panther fame as a young Harvard graduate who sets out to help a man (Jamie Foxx) accused of killing a white woman in 1986 Alabama. It’s based on the work of real life attorney Bryan Stevenson, who offered frequent free legal advice to those he felt had fallen prey to an unjust and racist justice system. Written and directed by Destin Daniel Cretton, Just Mercy co-stars Brie Larson, Rafe Spall, and Tim Blake Nelson and is, at times, an admittedly workmanlike film. Yet its dedicated cast and overall message help elevate it to greater heights.
Get Just Mercy showtimes in London.
A Hidden Life
Terrence Malick has taken a break from navel-gazing relationship dramas about people both beautiful and sad to bring us a three-hour-long epic set during WWII. A Hidden Life marks the divisive filmmaker’s first attempt to grapple with history since his underrated The New World; this time he finds inspiration in the true story of Franz Jägerstätter, an Austrian pacifist who refused to fight for the Nazis. All the Malick trademarks – fish eye lenses, swirling camera movements, characters talking to God – are present, but A Hidden Life stands as his most complex and narratively satisfying work in years. A must-see for anyone who feels his recent output has mostly consisted of pretentious drivel.
Get A Hidden Life showtimes in London or read our full review here.
Bad Boys for Life
We don’t care how optimistic you are: there’s no way anyone – anyone – could have guessed that the third and basically unwanted entry in a franchise nobody has thought about in 17 years would turn out to be the best one yet. Somehow, though, Bad Boys for Life, which stars Will Smith and Martin Lawrence as two wise-cracking cops based out of Miami, has enough charm, action, and self-awareness to wrestle the title away from the original. Isn’t it nice to Martin Lawrence back on the big screen and being genuinely likeable? Maybe the key to this film’s success was in jettisoning the franchise’s most toxic element, Michael Bay, and replacing him with Belgian filmmaking duo Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallam (Bay is, sadly, back for a cameo).
Get Bad Boys for Life showtimes in London or read our full review.
Bombshell
About as divisive as movies come these days, Bombshell – lauded for its fantastic performances from Charlize Theron, Nicole Kidman, and Margot Robbie but derided for its seemingly surface level approach – zeroes in on the story of the women who set about bringing down Fox News chairman and CEO Roger Ailes after he was accused of sexual harassment. Bombshell is – surprisingly or unsurprisingly, depending on your view – directed by Jay Roach, the guy who brought you Austin Powers, but is worth watching, at the very least, for Theron’s uncanny transformation into news anchor Megyn Kelly.
Get Bombshell showtimes in London.
Weathering with You
Makoto Shinkai, the Japanese genius who gifted us with the endlessly joyful animated masterpiece that is Your Name, is back with another spellbinding film – this time the aptly titled Weathering with You, with its story of a young man, Hodaka, who runs away and falls in love with a girl, Hina, who can control the weather. Essentially a rom-com with lots of sunshine and splashing about, it’s worth watching just for the water effects alone, which appear to have solely driven Shinkai’s desire to make the film. If you’re the kind of person whose perfect day consists of sitting indoors listening to the rain falling outside, this is basically a dream come true.
Get Weathering with You showtimes in London or read our full review.
1917
War! What is it good for? “Extended takes with no visible cuts,” is what director Sam Mendes might tell you based on his latest film, 1917, a white-knuckle thriller set in the trenches of the Great War, loosely inspired by the stories passed down by his veteran grandfather. The impression of a single, continuous shot frames his film as young soldiers Blake (Dean-Charles Chapman) and Schofield (George MacKay) are tasked with delivering a message deep behind enemy lines that could prevent the loss of more than 1,600 British lives. Roger Deakins’ stunning cinematography and Thomas Newman’s haunting score ensure that 1917 is always nail-biting, even if it ultimately ends up feeling more like a video game. But what a video game!
Get 1917 showtimes in London or read our full review.
Uncut Gems
Following Robert Pattinson crime flick Good Time, Safdie brothers Josh and Benny are back with yet another frenetic and anxiety-inducing caper and arguably the most stressful film ever put to celluloid. Featuring a ludicrously good Adam Sandler as a fast-talking Jewish jeweller looking to score big with the sale of a precious black opal, Uncut Gems unravels as a high-octane escapade of endless noise and unstoppable energy. As Sandler’s Howard Ratner is bashed relentlessly around from place to place, feeding his gambling habit and schmoozing his way out of trouble to the sound of Daniel Lopatin’s trippy score, Gems grounds us in a sleazy New York right out of a 70s thriller. The Safdies tried to get Uncut Gems made for over a decade; to say it’s been worth the wait is a major understatement.
Get Uncut Gems showtimes in London or read our full review.
The Holy Mountain
Originally released back in 1973, Jodorowsky’s The Holy Mountain – back in cinemas with a new 4K restoration – is about as screwy as movies get. Written, directed, and starring Jodorowsky himself, it chronicles the exploits of an alchemist and his followers as they set out on a quest to achieve true enlightenment (how very ‘7os). As with most of Jodorowsky’s work, the line between “weird” and “weird for the sake of it” is drawn very thin, yet there’s no denying this surreal and hallucinogenic trip of a film offers a unique insight into the mind of a self-proclaimed visionary. At once disorientating, hilarious, and pretentious, The Holy Mountain is packed with images you won’t quickly erase from your brain. The definition of a “cult” film – for better or worse
Get The Holy Mountain showtimes in London or read our full review.
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