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Related Reviews/Features

Repertory Rundown: What to Watch in London This Week, From Little Women to Sergio Leone

From classics to cult favourites, our team highlight some of the best one-off screenings and re-releases showing this week in the capital

Medusa review – surreal Brazilian protest film is a strange but unwieldy political object

Though it conjures up some compellingly freaky ways to visualise internalised misogyny, there's more to irritate than intrigue

Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken review – sweet and breezy, though haven’t we seen this before?

The latest effort from DreamWorks Animation doesn't seek to reinvent the wheel, but manages to charm in spite of its familiarity

Small, Slow But Steady review – boxing biopic is an uppercut above the rest

Shô Miyake's film about the world's first hearing-impaired professional woman boxer brilliantly sidesteps the standard beats

Repertory Rundown: What to Watch in London This Week, From Cairo Station to John Cassavetes

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The Wicker Man review – still the definitive experience in folk horror

Robin Hardy's iconic nightmare is back for its fiftieth anniversary, reaffirming its status as a singular entry in the horror canon

Repertory Rundown: What to Watch in London This Week, From Bastards to The Big Sleep

From classics to cult favourites, our team highlight some of the best one-off screenings and re-releases showing this week in the capital

Killers of the Flower Moon review – Scorsese’s American epic compels but never quite blossoms

This hugely ambitious take on David Grann's non-fiction book is engaging and well-made, but it's lacking the director's usual spark

Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny review – serviceable sequel is digging in the wrong place

Though it has its moments, James Mangold's bid to recapture the franchise magic mostly feels like an act of imitation over inspiration

Last Summer review – Catherine Breillat plays it safe with this illicit stepmother-stepson love affair

Known for her taboo erotic dramas, the director's remake of 2019’s Queen of Hearts fails to make up its mind on what it wants to be