Bill Ward

Related Reviews/Features

Repertory Rundown: What to Watch in London This Week, From Mistress America to The Man Who Wasn’t There

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

Repertory Rundown: What to Watch in London This Week, From Bogdanovich to Buster Keaton

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

Young Soul Rebels review – story of a young, Black, queer London still feels revolutionary

Though the acting and plotting have not aged well, this is still a fascinating time capsule, balancing nostalgia with progressivism

Sick of Myself review – outrageous satire will make you laugh with disgust

Norwegian director Kristoffer Borgli spins a fearless rom-com about a woman who chooses to engineer her own self-destruction

Repertory Rundown: What to Watch in London This Week, From Raimi to Rio Bravo

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

Repertory Rundown: What to Watch in London This Week, From Monkey Business to Miami Vice

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

Air review – a feature-length shoe advert elevated by a superb cast

Whilst its status as a corporate exercise is unavoidable, Ben Affleck's nostalgic underdog story has laughs and charm in spades

Repertory Rundown: What to Watch in London This Week, From Billy Liar to Beau Travail

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

Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania review – trilogy capper barely has any interest in its title character

Enjoyable villains aside, this MCU Phase Five opener is a mostly ominous promise of more convoluted, stakes-free things to come

Sharper review – New York-set psychological thriller is unoriginally blunt

Despite a stacked cast and an intriguing set-up, Benjamin Caron’s twisty film eventually gets caught in its own web of cons