Joe Wright Movies Ranked

Joe Wright Movies Ranked

Every feature film directed by British movie director Joe Wright ranked from worst to best. List includes ‘Darkest Hour’ and ‘Atonement’. Article by Margaret Roarty.

Read More

Bullet Train (2022) Review

Bullet Train (2022) Review

Brad Pitt leads an ensemble of star names in ‘Bullet Train’, from ‘Deadpool 2’ director David Leitch, that features plenty of shiny neon-soaked fight scenes but little by way of character. Kieran Judge reviews.

Read More

Godzilla (2014) Review

Godzilla (2014) Review

Warner Bros’ 2014 remake of ‘Godzilla’, from director Gareth Edwards and starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Elizabeth Olsen, Bryan Cranston, doesn’t quite live up to its potential. Sam Sewell-Peterson reviews.

Read More

Tenet (2020) Review

Tenet (2020) Review

‘Tenet’ (2020), written and directed by ‘Inception’ filmmaker Christopher Nolan, and starring John David Washington and Robert Pattinson, is “an unmissable cinematic experience”. Joseph Wade reviews.

Read More

Outlaw King (2018) Review

Outlaw King (2018) Review

David Mackenzie’s new Netflix Original film ‘Outlaw King’ starring Chris Pine is “a historical epic to remember – one that can satisfy visually and in terms of its brutality” according to Joseph Wade in his review.

Read More

The Editor’s Selections: Top 10 Films of 2016

The Editor’s Selections: Top 10 Films of 2016

In what he describes as ‘a year for the independents’, our editor Joseph Wade has presented his Top 10 Films of 2016, here.

Read More

Nocturnal Animals (2016) Review

Nocturnal Animals (2016) Review

Tom Ford’s Amy Adams and Jake Gyllenhaal starring psychological drama ‘Nocturnal Animals’ is a film reminiscent of “Hollywood’s more famous classical directors” according to Joseph Wade. His full review is available here.

Read More

Avengers: Age Of Ultron (2015) Review

Avengers: Age Of Ultron (2015) Review

Joss Whedon writes and directs Marvel’s 2nd big team-up movie ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’, a film that delivers on its promises but doesn’t have the spark of its predecessor. Review by Joseph Wade.

Read More