Cannes 2019 review: The Dead Don’t Die

★★☆☆☆ What makes Shaun of the Dead such an accomplished film is its combination of parody, comedy, and some genuinely well drawn characters. The Dead Don’t Die falls flat on all three fronts. This zombie comedy by Jim Jarmusch opened the Cannes Film Festival, but likely for its all star cast including Bill Murray, Adam Driver, Tilda Swinton and Selena Gomez to walk the red carpet. Focused on small town Centreville, USA, polar fracking has caused the earth to jolt...

Pokemon: Detective Pikachu fails to spark

★☆☆☆☆ Pokemon is a genuine cultural phenomenon. It’s a franchise over 20 years old spanning across card and console games, TV shows, animated movies and other merchandise, grossing north of $90bn. I have never played or watched any of it before. I am certain that for fans who have followed the games, who devoured the TV show and the many movies, that Detective Pikachu - the franchise’s first official move into live action - connects with the things they have...

Beats: Pulsating rave drama

★★★★☆ The 1994 Criminal Justice Act gave police officers the power to shut down events at which music “wholly or predominantly characterised by the emission of a succession of repetitive beats” was being played, a clearly personal attack at rave culture. This fact opens Beats, and is referred to throughout the Glasgow-set 90s drama. Placing those who pursue illegal raves against the government, the film grounds itself as a pean to a youth that as ever has every right to...

The Hustle: Dirty, rotten

★☆☆☆☆ From Overboard (Rob Greenberg, 2018) to What Men Want (Adam Shankman, 2019) and everything else in between, it’s safe to say that gender switch comedy remakes have so far failed to come up with the goods in the laughter department. The latest gender flip comedy, if you can call a film with zero funny gags a comedy, is a riff on the deeply unfunny 1988 film Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and stars Anne Hathaway and Rebel Wilson as two rival...

Long Shot: Hits most targets, misses a bullseye

★★★☆☆ Charlotte Field (Charlize Theron) is the youngest US Secretary of State in history and is preparing for a Presidential run, while her numbers are positive, she needs to up her humour score and so she’s looking for a joke writer to pump up her speeches. Fred Flarsky (Seth Rogen) has just quit his job after his left-wing online news site allow themselves to be bought out by a media conglomerate owned by Parker Wembley (an unrecognisable Andy Serkis). The...

Yesterday: Boyle’s Beatles brilliance

★★★★☆ Nobody can deny that sometimes the simplest of high concept film ideas can be the most ingenious ones. In the case of Danny Boyle’s Yesterday, that idea is so obvious that you can’t help but wonder, why has nobody thought of it until now? Written by the indisputable king of British romantic comedy Richard Curtis (Four Weddings and a Funeral, Notting Hill, Love Actually), Yesterday stars BBC Eastenders’ actor Himesh Patel as a failed musician who wakes up in...

High Life: A chilling and divisive space odyssey

★★★★☆ High Life is a confronting, visceral and totally obscure deep space adventure, that’s likely to appeal to viewers who prefer their science fiction movies in a minimalist, slow-burn style. This film, directed by Claire Denis, has arthouse written all over it. There are no galaxy shoot outs or alien invasions here – just cryptic scenes of a criminal named Monte (Robert Pattinson), trying to survive on a prison ship while raising an infant girl, and the story focuses on...

Avengers Endgame: Spoiler free review

★★★☆☆ We left the Avengers in a cloud of dust that used to be their friends and fellow heroes, snapped out of existence along with half the living creatures in the universe. We meet them again a few weeks later, attempting to pick up the pieces, to try once more to retrieve the infinity stones from Thanos and reverse his seemingly final victory. The Marvel Cinematic Universe has produced a few very good films, some very bad ones and a...

Roundup Reviews: Greta and Red Joan

Greta ★★★☆☆ Dir: Neil Jordan When Frances McCullen (Chloe Grace Moretz) returns a handbag she found on the subway, she becomes friends with a lonely older woman named Greta (Isabelle Huppert). When she discovers some disturbing things about Greta and tries to cut off contact, Frances finds that her new friend isn’t so easy to shake. Neil Jordan’s first film since the underseen Byzantium is a bit of a throwback. 90s nostalgia is in at the moment, and this film...

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