With the year at the halfway point, our writers choose their favourite films, from daring documentaries to box office bombs
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
From classics to cult favourites, our team highlight some of the best one-off screenings and re-releases showing this week in the capital
Mia Goth gives a terrifyingly hypnotic, career-defining turn in Ti West's wildly entertaining and colourful confection of a movie
The rise and fall of the BlackBerry makes for surprisingly gripping viewing in Matt Johnson's distinctly Canadian tragicomedy
As the month-long celebration kicks off again, Steph Green offers a pathway into the most morally murky of all movie genres...
To mark the release of Crimes of the Future, Steph Green sorts the body-obsessed auteur's vast filmography from worst to best...
John Michael McDonagh's angry but sluggish adaptation lacks dramatic punch, falling short in its attempts at anti-wealth satire
Daisy Edgar-Jones is fatally miscast in an abysmal murder mystery that lacks believable characters or even a trace of tension
To coincide with the 25th anniversary of Robert Zemeckis' sci-fi classic, Luke Walpole looks back on its perfectly pitched lead turn