Latest FromMovie Reviews
Movie review: <i>The Twilight Saga: Eclipse</i>
The latest film in the Twilight saga is a painfully slow game of love where no one scores, writes Jacqueline Smith.
Movie review: <i>Tulpan</i>
Full disclosure: I am a complete sucker for films set in that broad sweep of land between Ulan Bator and the Caucasus.
Movie review: <i>Get Him to the Greek</i>
Get Him to the Greek is very much a satire, taking the mickey out of the music industry in general.
Movie review: <i>Dans Paris</i>
This downbeat French family drama is so dated I had to check my watch to make sure I had not been transported back to the 1970s.
Movie review: <i>Shrek Forever After</i>
Everyone's favourite ogre faces a midlife crisis in what might be the most serious Shrek movie of them all, writes Russell Baillie.
Movie review: <i>Amreeka</i>
Good-hearted but occasionally clunky, this story traverses rather belatedly the same territory as mainstream films like The Visitor.
Movie review: <i>Sex and the City 2</i>
While the sequel is neither as hilarious or emotional as its predecessor, it at least ups the ante for endless wardrobe changes.
Movie review: <i>Street Dance 3D</i>
The first British film shot in 3D uses the technology to bring dance and cinema together in an exuberant way.
Movie review: <i>The Last Station</i>
This adaptation of Jay Parini's 1990 novel about the last year in the life of the great Russian novelist Count Leo Tolstoy is like a night at the theatre in London or New York.
Movie review: <i>The French Kissers</i>
In contrast to the teen-model stars of American romps, the kids look and act like real kids - and that's what makes the film so charming.
Movie review: <i>Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time</i>
A big, ballsy, fun and instantly forgettable blockbuster.
Movie review: <i>Brothers</i>
The film becomes a worthy tribute to the stress-disordered veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan but in the process it's drained of the intense dramatic life that distinguished the original.
Movie review: <i>Paper Heart</i>
A fictitious romance, real people sharing their experiences, and handmade cardboard puppets all come together charmingly in this unique documentary about love.
Movie review: <i>Every Jack Has A Jill</i>
French writer and director Jennifer Devoldere's debut feature is a gentle transatlantic romance.
Movie review: <i>Camino</i>
The film is inspired by the case of Alexia Gonzalez-Barros, a Spanish boy who died aged 14 in 1985 of cancer of the spine, and is still being considered for sainthood.
Movie review: <i>The Habit of Art</i>
This imaginary 1972 meeting between poet W.H. Auden and composer Benjamin Britten is an absolute cracker.
Movie review: <i>Robin Hood</i>
In its strident efforts to be historically plausible, this latest Robin Hood may do away with many past traditions, among them the whole robbing from the rich policy of past incumbents.