It’s a big year for the Shyamalan clan, bullishly expanding into the spotlight with such runaway speed that one assumes an accompanying reality show might
Category: Films
‘I’ll never forgive or forget’ – Griffin Dunne on the darkness that overtook his gilded Hollywood upbringing
Griffin Dunne has just written a book. He had been meaning to do so for ages. It was one of the items on his bucket
The man who warned us about UPFs: Michael Pollan on his 25-year fight with the food industry
In the middle of Food, Inc 2 – the follow-up documentary to 2008’s Food, Inc, narrated by Michael Pollan and Eric Schlosser – scientists share
Harry Hill: ‘I always thought I’d make a good serial killer’
As a doctor, how often does a family member or friend ask: “I’ve got this little thing bothering me and wonder if you’d mind taking
Lumberjack the Monster review – an explosion of horror strangeness from a master of the art
The vintage year of 1999 has been back in the critical conversation recently for its quarter-centenary; it was the year of The Sixth Sense, The
The Dead Don’t Hurt review | Peter Bradshaw’s film of the week
This sinewy, sombre, handsomely crafted and beautifully shot western is Viggo Mortensen’s second feature as a director, an impressively authored movie in which Mortensen is
The Matrix review – barnstorming sci-fi still calling our reality into question
To paraphrase Apu in The Simpsons, this was the year filmgoers were partying like it was on sale for $19.99; it offered the vintage of
Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey 2 review – mutant-bear slasher is back in the woods
A swiftly turned-around sequel to last year’s notoriously lame Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey, this splatterfest horror feature is better than its predecessor much in the
Under Paris: Netflix has delivered one of the best shark movies ever made
Almost exactly a decade ago, I unwittingly played into an extremely corny publicity gimmick by wearing a heart-rate monitor during a movie screening. I did
Food, Inc 2 review – second helping of broadsides against the food-industry crisis
Robert Kenner’s 2008 documentary Food, Inc was an angry wake-up call to the evils of industrialised food production. Now Kenner is back for another bite,