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Takeshi Yashiro Shorts
Watching these short films was a delight and the collective magic of the productions makes insignificant the small imperfections.
Wonder Woman 1984
WW84 is pretty disappointing - a surface level plot, barely held together. For a character who was holding up the DCEU, one expected better. Instead, we’ll have to settle for yet another star turn from Pedro Pascal.
Happiest Season
This is a worthy addition to the Christmas movie pantheon, but its ending rings hollow due to the subverted character arcs.
Misbehaviour
In the end, girls just want to have fun … damental human rights.
Let Him Go
Let Him Go isn’t a film you’re likely to let go for quite some time. It stays with you long after you leave the cinema - that weirdly enjoyable, oddly engaging movie that dealt with grief, heartbreak, and loss, along with a healthy dose of gruff action and drama.
Fatman
In the end, Fatman is a convoluted mess, and a disappointment in that it never reaches its true potential. At the same time, however, it would be a lie to say this wasn’t a fun and bonkers watch.
Summerland
Summerland isn’t breaking any boundaries, but it is a movie you can sink into with ease.
Ammonite
Ammonite needed more to say, but what a beautiful way to have said what it did.
Freaky
Freaky is a helluva lot of fun, and while it isn’t as scary as it could be, it is certainly funny as hell.
Radioactive
Radioactive is a strange, hard to pin down film, but the incredible true story of this historical pioneer and the performance from Rosamund Pike make this a worthy time at the cinema.
SIX60: Till The Lights Go Out Review
An interesting documentary that will introduce you to a New Zealand ban you’ve never heard of.
Never Rarely Sometimes Always Review
Never Rarely Sometimes Always is a harrowing and unrelenting film that ultimately is a treatise on the ability of young women to overcome a system designed to keep them down.
The Last Black Man in San Francisco Review
A weird and engaging film; tackling gentrification and the steady marginalisation of San Francisco’s minorities in an undeniably magical mood piece.
The Trial of the Chicago 7 Review
A good, but not great, courtroom drama.
Kajillionaire Review
A quirky romantic comedy that draws you ever deeper into a complete adoration of its strange world.
Honest Thief Review
Liam Neeson sleepwalks through this unsurprising actioner.
Big Time Adolescence Review
Big Time Adolescence is a solid start for first time feature film director and writer Jason Orley.
The Secrets We Keep Review
A dark, meticulous and slow film.
Antebellum Review
A compelling story with a good twist, that needed an extra script-pass and surer directorial hands to really pop.
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Bigger, bloodier and funnier - Mortal Kombat II brings it in spades.