Cath Clarke is Time Out London's film editor. Her career high is that time Gary Oldman left a giggling voicemail on her mobile. Or maybe when Julianne Moore's dog fell asleep on her foot.
Articles (131)
The 70 best romcoms of all time
Romcoms are cinemaâs greatest guilty pleasure. Everyone talks about them in snickering tones, or pretends to only enjoy them ironically. But the truth is that everyone has at least one they canât get enough of â that comfort film they turn on when no one else is around, like that ratty old sweater you refuse to throw away but would never wear in public. Really, though: what is there to feel guilty about? Although dismissed as âchick flicksâ, romantic comedies are more relatable than just about any other category of film. Who hasnât been in love, in one form or another? And honestly, whatâs funnier than the things humans do while under loveâs spell? But the best romcoms donât have to be merely silly, even if many of them are. Some plumb the complexities of the human heart. Some are dark and cynical, others are light and airy, or borderline fantastical. As someone once said, love is a many-splendored thing. So let us count the ways, with this list of the greatest romcoms of all time. Written by Dave Calhoun, Cath Clarke, Tom Huddleston, Kate Lloyd, Andy Kryza, Phil de Semlyen, Alim Kheraj & Matthew Singer Recommended: đ The 100 best romantic films of all-timeđ€Ł The 100 best comedy moviesđł The 101 best sex scenes of all timeđ„ The 100 best movies of all-time
The 100 best comedy movies: the funniest films of all time
Comedy has a shorter shelf life than just about any other movie genre. A classic drama will still make hearts swell and eyes water decades down the line, and a truly terrifying horror movie can still scare the bejesus out of viewers no matter how standards for scares change. But humour is highly subjective and dependent on context: whatâs funny in 1924 might land with a thud in 2024. Thatâs why, when considering the greatest comedy movies of all-time, one of the most important questions is not necessarily how big the laughs are, but how long they can keep audiences laughing. With the help of comedians like Diane Morgan and Russell Howard, actors such as John Boyega and Jodie Whittaker and a small army of Time Out writers, we believe weâve found the 100 finest, most durable and most broadly appreciable comedies in history. As we said, hilarity is in the gut of the beholder â some like it, silly, others sophisticated or dark or surreal â but if you donât find something funny on this list, you may want to check your pulse. Recommended: đ„ The 100 best movies of all-timeđ„° The greatest romantic comedies of all timeđŹ The best thriller films of all-timeđ The best foreign films of all-time
The best LGBTQ+ movies of all time
In the past few decades, queer cinema has made major strides â not just in reaching mainstream audiences, but in redefining what âqueer cinemaâ actually looks like. In the past, if gay lives and issues were ever allowed to be addressed on screen at all, the viewpoint was often limited to that of white, cisgender men. But the LGBTQ+ experience is not a monolith, and recent years have seen the scope of queer film expand to include the voices of the trans community and people of colour. Obviously, there are still many barriers left to breach, but the progress of the last half-century or so deserves to be celebrated. To that end, we enlisted some LGBTQ+ cultural pioneers, as well as Time Out writers to assist in assembling a list of the greatest gay films ever made. Written by Cath Clarke, Dave Calhoun, Tom Huddleston, Alim Kheraj, Guy Lodge, Ben Walters and Matthew Singer. RECOMMENDED: đ„ The 100 best movies of all-timeđ„ The 65 best documentaries of all-timeđ The 100 best romantic films of all-timeđ€Ł The 100 best comedies of all-time
As 100 melhores comédias: os filmes mais hilariantes do cinema
A comĂ©dia Ă© um gĂ©nero frequentemente ignorado pelos prĂ©mios e pela crĂtica. Mas produzir uma grande comĂ©dia, uma comĂ©dia intemporal, Ă© uma das maiores conquistas no cinema. Ă uma forma de arte em grande parte dependente do contexto: aquilo que faz uma plateia chorar a rir em 2024 pode ser recebido mais tarde com olhares vazios â nem sequer Ă© preciso passar meio sĂ©culo, como Ă© muitas vezes o caso; bastam alguns anos de diferença. Por isso mesmo, aqueles que nos fizeram rir durante dĂ©cadas sĂŁo verdadeiramente especiais. Para elaborar esta lista das 100 maiores comĂ©dias de sempre, pedimos a comediantes como Diane Morgan e Russell Howard, a actores como John Boyega e Jodie Whittaker e a uma pequena legiĂŁo de escritores da Time Out sobre os filmes que mais os fazem rir, e por mais tempo. Ao fazĂȘ-lo, acreditamos ter encontrado as melhores, mais intemporais e amplamente apreciĂĄveis 100 comĂ©dias da histĂłria do cinema. Independentemente do seu sentido de humor â disparatado ou sofisticado, leve ou sombrio, surreal ou mais abrangente â vai encontrĂĄ-lo representado aqui. Recomendado:đ„ Os 100 melhores filmes de sempređ„° As melhores comĂ©dias romĂąnticas de sempre
The 100 best horror movies of all time
Everyone is scared of something. It might be something specific, like spiders or snakes or heights, or something less tangible, like death or failure. But deep down, even the most posturing tough guy harbours deep-seated fears. Perhaps that explains why horror has grown into one of the most popular of all film genres. Even if a movie doesnât necessarily touch on the things that personally scare us the most, allowing ourselves to be scared at all helps us confront and ease the anxieties and fears that keep us paralysed.  Of course, horror hasnât always been a moneymaker. Not long ago, it was mainly a niche interest, ignored by mass audiences and shrugged off by critics. The recent artistic and commercial success of films like Get Out, A Quiet Place and Talk to Me have brought retroactive respect to a genre once synonymous with schlock. So if youâve spent too much of your film fandom dismissing horror, consider this your guide to everything youâve missed. Here are the 100 greatest horror movies ever made. Written by Tom Huddleston, Cath Clarke, Dave Calhoun, Nigel Floyd, Phil de Semlyen, David Ehrlich, Joshua Rothkopf, Nigel Floyd, Andy Kryza, Alim Kheraj and Matthew Singer Recommended: đȘ The best new horror movies of 2024 (so far)đ„ The 100 best movies of all timeđč Cinemaâs creepiest anthology horror moviesđ©žÂ The 15 scariest horror movies based on true stories
The 101 best sex scenes in movies of all time
Sex scenes are back! After a chaste period that had the internet wondering why cinema had lost its libido altogether, big-screen nookie has made a comeback. From Poor Thingsâ orgy of âfurious jumpingâ to Passagesâ complex, elicit mĂ©nage Ă trois, to All of Us Strangersâ tender gay romance and Femmeâs much less tender one, sex is everywhere you look â and itâs all to the good. Because while Jermaine Stewart wasnât wrong when he sang that: âyou donât have to take your clothes off to have a good timeâ, some well-judged on-screen sex can definitely help a filmmaker tell their story â and ideally, not in a porn-y, lascivious, exploitative way. Because as a means of deepening a romance, building character, shocking and provoking an audience, thereâs plenty to be said for kicking off the undies and getting down to it. But thereâs a bigger story here, too, because the story of sex scenes is the story of cinema: a slow evolution from Hays Code-era censorship to a more open and honest view of human behaviour marked by sudden advances in whatâs depicted â and more than a few regressive ones, too. The good, the bad and the ugly â looking at you, Last Tango in Paris â are all represented by the 101 entries below, a list that show how filmsâ steamier sides has shaken up the medium â and the world. Sorry Jermaine, but weâre taking cinemaâs clothes off. Written by Dave Calhoun, Joshua Rothkopf, Cath Clarke, David Ehrlich, Phil de Semlyen, Daniel Walber, Trevor Johnston, Andy Kryza, Daniel Wa
The 50 best gangster movies of all time
As far back as anyone can remember, cinemagoers have loved gangsters. Itâs not hard to understand. Who hasnât fantasised about living outside the law, of having money and influence, of being untouchable? In reality, life as a career criminal seems like a bum gig â always looking over your shoulder, never able to trust even your closest compatriots, and of course, all the immoral behaviour. But getting to live vicariously through the ones we see on screen is one of cinemaâs purest thrills. But not all movie gangsters are built the same. Some are loud and boisterous, others cold, calculating and unreadable. From fedora-sporting mobsters to pistol-packing yakuza enforcers, to street-level bosses whose empire only extends to the end of the block, cinema has seen them all and told their stories â and youâll find all of them on our definitive list of the best gangster movies of all-time. Recommended: đŹ The 100 best thriller movies of all-timeđŁ The 101 best action movies ever madeđȘ The 31 best serial killer moviesđ”ïž 40 murder mysteries to test your sleuthing skills to the max
The best teen romance movies of all time
No one ever experiences love later in life quite like they do as teenagers. Sure, when you get older you might be able to better discern real love from an intense crush, and have the skills to make it last longer a semester in high school, but romance never feels quite as exhilarating as it does during your teenage years. Itâs no surprise that filmmakers frequently try to recreate those feelings onscreen. Of course, writing about adolescent emotions when youâre far removed from them isnât easy, and it doesnât always translate in a way that rings true. Every once in a while, though, a movie drills so precisely into the experience of young love it can make even the most ancient curmudgeon feel like a hopeless, hormonal romantic all over again. The following 16 movies are among those that got it right. Recommended: đ The 100 best romantic films of all-timeđ€Ł The 70 best romantic comedies of all-timeđ The best breakup and heartbreak moviesđŻ The 100 best teen movies of all-time
The best breakup and heartbreak movies
They say itâs better to have loved and lost than to never have loved at all. Well, maybe. But in the moment, there is no pain worse than having your heart broken. It is true, though, that you really canât know true love without also experiencing its loss. Thatâs why, if you peruse our lists of the best romantic films and romcoms, youâll find several of the same movies that made this list of the best heartbreakers in film history. In fact, many of the greatest romances in cinema end in sadness, tragedy or a resigned acknowledgement that sometimes, relationships just donât work out. These movies might crush you, but they also serve as a reminder that even if a great romance ends, that doesnât dilute the experience of romance itself. Just have a well-stocked box of Kleenex ready to go before watching any of these. Youâll need it. Recommended: đ The 100 best romantic films of all-timeđ The 70 best romcoms of all-timeđ„ The 100 best movies of all-time
The best Halloween movies and TV shows on Netflix UK
Itâs beginning to feel a lot like spooky season. The days are gradually getting darker, the air is ever-so-slightly crisper and the smell of pumpkin spice is already wafting through the air. So you know whatâs right around the corner: a month-long marathon of horror movies. Depending on when you read this, it might all seem a bit premature. But itâs never too early to start planning your Halloween viewing. Thankfully, Netflix is a veritable pillowcase full of treats, and not just scary movies â though theyâve got a few of those. If youâre looking for something to binge, the streamer has several horror-themed series as well, ranging from the lightly spooky to the downright terrifying. Whatever kind of frights youâre in the mood for, itâs available, and here are the best of them.  Recommended: đ± The 24 best horror movies streaming on Netflix UKđš The 100 best horror movies of all-timeđč The 50 best monster movies ever madeđȘ The best serial killer movies of all-time
The best movies of the 1990s, ranked
Hereâs a hot take for you: the 1990s were the best decade for movies ever. It shouldnât be that controversial when you really give it some thought. It was a time of mindblowing innovation, not just in terms of special effects but the kind of stories major studios felt comfortable telling. It was the era when the indies blew up and blockbusters got even bigger. International cinema reached wider audiences than ever before. It was when going to the movies truly felt like an experience, because anything seemed possible. And if you werenât alive to experience it in real time, well, sucks for you. But donât worry â weâre here to help you catch up with a list of the absolute best movies of the 1990s. Some are obvious, others are lesser-known gems, while some are conspicuous in their absence. (Sorry, Forrest.) But whether youâre nostalgic for the era or missed it all together, weâre certain youâll agree that it was an exciting time to be going to the movies. Dust off that Game Boy and crack open a Surge â these are the 50 best movies of the 1990s. Written by Cath Clarke, Gail Tolley, Chris Waywell, Dave Calhoun, Tom Huddleston, Kate Lloyd, James Manning & Matthew Singer Recommended: đ„ The 100 best movies of all-timeđ€Ł The 100 best comedies of all-timeđ The 50 best foreign films of all-timeđž The 50 best â90s songsÂ
The best animated movies of all time to add to your watch list
Cartoons arenât just for kids, of course. But for most kids, cartoons are where a love of movies often starts. No matter how highfalutin your taste in movies as an adult, chances are, your first cinematic obsession was an animation â whether it was a classic of Disneyâs Golden Age or its â90s renaissance period, a Pixar heart-tugger or perhaps even a Studio Ghibli masterpiece. Itâs a love most of us never never fully grow out of, either. Ask any parent about the joys of early child-rearing and theyâll undoubtedly tell you about showing their kids a cartoon they loved as a youngâun. Itâs a magical experience you get from few other forms of entertainment.  But the best animated movies donât just appeal to kids, nor childhood nostalgia. They work on multiple levels, for broad audiences and age groups. In composing this list of the greatest animated movies ever made, we polled Time Out writers and experts including Fantastic Mr Foxâs Wes Anderson and Wallace and Gromitâs Nick Park, and the results run the gamut, from from those Disney, Pixar and Ghibli no-brainers to stop-motion nightmares, psychedelic headtrips, illustrated documentaries and bizarre experimental features that are decidedly for adults only. The movies on this list may make you feel like a kid again â but they may also blow your grown-up mind in ways you never expected. Written by Trevor Johnston, David Ehrlich, Joshua Rothkoph, Tom Huddleston, Andy Kryza, Guy Lodge, Dave Calhoun, Keith Uhlich, Cath Clarke and M
Listings and reviews (162)
Support the Girls
The âbreastaurantâ never caught on in the UK: that creepy American institution of family-friendly sports bars where waitresses wear push-up bras and not much else (a side of soft porn with your burger, sir?). With his easy-going workplace comedy, indie director Andrew Bujalski gives us a day in the life of the female manager of a Texas joint called Double Whammies, where the customers are wardrobe-sized construction dudes in bandanas ordering âbig ass beersâ. Regina Hall, who after âGirls Tripâ is finally getting the recognition she deserves, is terrific as Lisa, everyoneâs favourite boss â caring, kind, super-competent. But even Lisaâs patience is tested by the day from hell. When she arrives to open up the bar, a thief has broken in overnight. Lisa is also worrying about how to find bail money for a waitress whoâs been arrested for running over her dick boyfriend. Hall gives a natural, real performance; sheâs like someone youâve met. âSupport the Girlsâ is brilliant on zero-hours culture: companies requiring employees to give 110 percent in return for the minimum wage and no job security. What can make all difference is a boss like Lisa. Weirdly though, the film doesnât have a whole lot to say about the way restaurants like Double Whammies â the real-life national chain is Hooters â normalise the sexual objectification of women. Though one of the waitresses jokes about finding a bar where the waiters are hot guys in Speedos. âThey should call it Nut-Huggers,â she suggests.Â
Woman at War
This comedy-drama from Iceland asks some timely biggies about the climate change movement in its story about an ordinary woman with a secret double life as an environmental activist. The film has a bone-dry sense of humour, though the quirk level is turned up just a fraction too high. Itâs built around a cracking performance by HalldĂłra GeirharĂ°sdĂłttir, playing 49-year-old choir teacher Halla, who spends her free time shooting a bow and arrow at electricity pylons in the countryside, causing major power cuts. The filmâs questions are important: is it acceptable to take direct action that disrupts ordinary peopleâs lives if you believe nothing is being done to prevent the ecological crisis? As a parent, is your biggest responsibility to keep your kids safe in the here and now, or to save the planet from impending climate breakdown? Halla, whoâs single, is plotting her most dangerous stunt yet when her long-standing application to adopt a Ukrainian baby is suddenly accepted. Sheâs to become the mother of a little girl. So too is her identical twin sister, Ăsa (also played by GeirharĂ°sdĂłttir). Here the plot gets far-fetched, and the filmâs surreal touches make it hard to connect emotionally to Halla. Worst of all are the kooky musicians performing in the background of some scenes. They look like buskers at an organic farmersâ market â beardy, in vintage tweed. Iâd cross the road to dodge them in real life, but you just canât avoid them in a film.Â
Five Feet Apart
Film review by Cath ClarkeA mushy-slushy romance about a pair of terminally ill teenagers who meet on a cystic fibrosis ward would ordinarily leave me in a puddle on the floor. (I speak as someone who once choked up watching a washing powder advert.) But âFive Feet Apartâ, with its phoney emotions and baloney contrivances â these love-struck kids canât even hold hands let alone get to first base because two people with cystic fibrosis arenât allowed to touch â just didnât do the job for me. Haley Lu Richardson almost gives you a reason to watch as Stella, who has cystic fibrosis and is super-positive about her chances of getting a lung transplant (itself not miracle cure â new lungs will only extend her life by five years). She fills her days in hospital writing life-affirming to-do lists and doing yoga. Down the hall, brooding bad boy Will (a charmless performance by Cole Sprouse) has stopped taking his meds. He agrees to start again only if Stella lets him draw her. Credit to the filmmakers for the unsqueamish illness details here, down to the stomach feeding tubes and bowls of spittle. Yet the script is weirdly coy about sex â Stella and Will risk passing infections with physical contact. But surely teenagers with smartphones can work out a way to bypass the no-touching rule? In the end âFive Feet Apartâ jerked not a single tear from me.
A dos metros de ti
Este pesado romance sobre un par de adolescentes con enfermedades terminales, que se conocen en una sala de fibrosis quĂstica, normalmente me harĂa dejar un charco en el suelo, pero A dos metros de ti, con sus falsas emociones y las tonterĂas de niños enamorados (Stella y Will) que no pueden tomarse ni de las manos ây mucho menos llegar a la primera baseâsimplemente no me atrapĂł. Stella es muy positiva sobre sus posibilidades de recibir un trasplante de pulmĂłn, que no es una cura milagrosa; los nuevos pulmones solo le darĂĄn otros cinco años. Ella pasa sus dĂas en el hospital, escribiendo listas de tareas y haciendo yoga. Al final de un pasillo conoce a Will, un desamparado niño malo que ha dejado de tomar sus medicamentos. Ăl acepta volver a tomarlos, solo si Stella le permite dibujarla. Gracias a los cineastas por los detalles de la enfermedad, hasta los tubos de alimentaciĂłn del estĂłmago y los cuencos de saliva. Sin embargo, el guiĂłn es extrañamente tĂmido acerca del sexo: Stella y Will corren el riesgo de contraer infecciones con el contacto fĂsico. ÂżPero seguramente los adolescentes con telĂ©fonos inteligentes pueden encontrar una manera de evitar la regla de âno tocarâ? En el A dos metros de ti no derramĂł ni una sola lĂĄgrima.
Fisherman's Friends
Hereâs a harmless piece of Britcom silliness loosely based on the incredible rise of the Cornish sea-shanty group the Fishermanâs Friends. After being discovered singing on a quayside, the ten-man bunch of mates â all fishermen or coastguards whoâd been singing together for donkey's years down the pub â landed a deal with a major label, recorded a Top 10 album and played Glastonbury. Theirs is a tale of authenticity cutting through the PR and hype of the music industry, so what a shame this movie Cornish-ifies, âFull Montyâ-ifies and crowdpleaser-ifies the story until itâs as authentic as vegan fish and chips. The script throws in the fictional character of a flashy music exec played by Daniel Mays, a genuinely funny actor with not much to work with here as Danny, whoâs in Cornwall for a stag do when he spots the Fishermanâs Friends performing. At first, the idea of signing them is a joke, but then he begins to wonder⊠have these yokely locals got something to teach him about how to really live life? You can guess the rest. There are a couple of nice scenes â like one in London where the band find themselves on-trend in a Shoreditch pub, with their facial hair and navy tattoos. But otherwise this is all pretty groanworthy, with a distinct shortage of decent gags. As for the poor guys in the band â less characters, more a collection of beards and good knitwear â they play second fiddle to the numpty from London.
On Her Shoulders
This documentary is about the awe-inspiring bravery of Nadia Murad, the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Iraqi woman kidnapped by Isis as a sex slave aged 21 in 2014 â sheâs a member of the ancient Yazidi minority. Sold to Isis fighters, and repeatedly raped, Murad eventually escaped, arriving in Germany as a refugee with a group of female survivors. But she found it impossible to build a new life while Yazidi women and girls were still captive, so she went out and told her story. American documentary-maker Alexandria Bombach initially picks up Muradâs story in 2016. Sheâs in the spotlight after giving a speech to the UN about her ordeal and flying around the world, saying yes to every media request and invitation to speak to politicians. We see her sitting down in front of microphone after microphone, drained, traumatised, but focused, holding it together, while yet another journalist asks her: âHow many times were you raped?â, âHow did you escape?â With great sensitivity, Bombach refrains from quizzing Murad about what Isis did to her during the interviews. Why do we want to know the details? Instead, we hear Murad talk movingly about the parts of herself that have been robbed for ever. As a teenager she dreamt of opening a beauty salon or becoming a teacher. Thatâs all lost. âI never wanted people to know me as a victim of Isis terrorism.â Her only hope now is if the world acts on the genocide of the Yazidi. What a powerful and important film.Â
Amigos por siempre
Este dĂ©jĂ vu de la exitosa comedia francesa Intouchables, cuenta la historia de una bromance entre un rico cuadriplĂ©jico y su cuidador afroamericano, solo que aquĂ recibe el clĂĄsico tratamiento de Hollywood. Esto realmente es un remake increĂblemente cursi, y el original ya era bastante cursi. Ahora, protagonizada por el protagonista de Breaking Bad, Bryan Cranston y Kevin Hart, dan lo mejor de sĂ con un guiĂłn que resuelve todos los clichĂ©s de pelĂculas de parejas extrañas. Aunque bien actuado. Cranston interpreta al inversionista multimillonario Phillip, paralizado desde el cuello hacia abajo despuĂ©s de un accidente de parapente. Cuando su secretaria (Nicole Kidman) busca un cuidador, Phillip contrata al candidato menos calificado Dell (Hart). No mucho despuĂ©s de la cĂĄrcel, Dell solo va a la entrevista para mantener contento a su oficial de libertad condicional. ¿EstĂĄ Phillip encantado por su humor y realidad? ¿O porque sospecha que Dell no ignorarĂĄ su orden de âNo resucitarâ? Sigue una gran cantidad de comedia de amigos antes que nada, mientras Phillip introduce a Dell a la cultura intelectual, y este le da a su jefe un alto nivel de marihuana. El guiĂłn incluso presenta un fragmento de Mujer bonita en la que Julia Roberts llora en la Ăłpera. Eso no quiere decir que Amigos por siempre fue rescrita. Los dos actores rebotan entre sĂ como pelotas de ping pong. Cranston en particular, actuando solo con su cara, lleva a la humanidad y la inteligencia a una parte dĂ©bil, y es bast
The Upside
Itâs dĂ©jĂ vu as the life-affirming hit French comedy-drama âThe Intouchablesâ, the true story of a bromance between a wealthy quadriplegic man and his black live-in carer from the projects (aka the American version of a council estate), gets the Hollywood treatment. This really is an incredibly cheesy remake â and the original was already pretty cheesy â starring âBreaking Badâ actor Bryan Cranston and Kevin Hart, doing their best with a script that cracks out all the odd-couple movie clichĂ©s. Itâs nicely acted though. Cranston plays billionaire investor Phillip, paralysed from the neck down after a paragliding accident. When his secretary (Nicole Kidman) advertises for a carer, Phillip hires the least qualified candidate Dell (Hart). Not long out of prison, Dell only shows up at the interview to keep his parole officer sweet. Is Phillip charmed by his humour and realness? Or because he suspects that Dell wonât ignore his Do Not Resuscitate order? A good deal of seen-it-before buddy comedy follows, as Phillip introduces Dell to highbrow culture, while Dell gets his boss high on marijuana. The script even nicks that bit from âPretty Womanâ where Julia Roberts cries at the opera. Thatâs not to say The Upside is a complete write-off. The two actors bounce off each like ping-pong balls. Cranston in particular, acting only with his face, brings humanity and intelligence to a flimsy part â and itâs pretty funny in places. But thereâs no ignoring the fact that the characters are ba
Mortal Engines
A kind of âMad Maxâ for pre-teens, this mega-budget YA sci-fi fantasy opens with a barnstorming chase across a dystopian wasteland â only itâs not cars on the move but steampunk cities. The film, based on the first in a series of novels by Philip Reeve, is directed by Christian Rivers, an apprentice of Peter Jackson (who co-produces here and co-wrote this script). Like the âHobbitâ movies, âMortal Enginesâ is a relentless assault of CGI and earsplitting noise. Set 1,000 years after civilisation was blown to smithereens, the remains of cities have been rigged on to tank tracks. London, pimped out with St Paulâs Cathedral on top, is an aggressor city, roaming around hoovering up smaller towns. Robert Sheehan plays museum worker Tom. After a run-in with Londonâs sinister energy minister (Hugo Weaving, doing a nice shade of dastardly) he meets Hester (Hera Hilmar), whoâs seeking to avenge the murder of her mother. Raised in the dusty outlands, Hester is one tough cookie, though in time her rough edges will be smoothed off by friendship, and who knows, possibly more. âMortal Enginesâ really is 10 percent inspiration and 90 percent slog, as characters leap unfeasibly out of planes on to bits of cities while a squad of rebel-fighter pilots straight out of âStar Warsâ buzz around. Its video-game aesthetic is awash with CGI dazzle â though if you had your fingers on the controls, you might have preferred to send them all under the tank treads after that spectacular opener.
Colette
Basada en la historia real de la escritora francesa Colette (Keira Knightley), el director Wash Westmoreland ('Siempre Alice') nos sumerge en la escena literaria del ParĂs de principios del siglo XX. Lejos de hablarnos de una ciudad vibrante, lo que retrata la cĂĄmara es un mundo pretencioso y oportunista, el hĂĄbitat ideal para el marido de Colette (Dominic West), un trepa que se lleva todo el mĂ©rito de las novelas que ella escribe. Toda la pelĂcula trata de la relaciĂłn entre ellos. Es magnĂfico ver cĂłmo el personaje femenino va cogiendo confianza al tiempo que se libera del yugo de un hombre mediocre y aprovechado. Knightley borda esta evoluciĂłn, sobre todo a partir del momento en que comienza a explorar su identidad sexual. En el otro lado del espectro, West aborda el papel del marido dibujando con sutileza el perfil psicolĂłgico de un tipo que intenta enmascarar con fanfarronerĂa sus inseguridades mĂĄs profundas. Sin absolverlo de sus faltas, consigue generarnos una cierta simpatĂa.
Colette
Basada en la histoÌria real de lâescriptora francesa Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette (Keira Knightley), el director Wash Westmoreland ('Sempre Alice') ens capbussa en lâescena literaÌria del PariÌs de principis del segle XX. Lluny de parlar-nos dâuna ciutat vibrant, el que retrata la caÌmera eÌs un moÌn pretensioÌs i oportunista, lâhaÌbitat ideal per al marit de Colette (Dominic West), un trepa que sâemporta tot el meÌrit de les novel·les que ella escriu. Tota la pel·liÌcula tracta de la relacioÌ entre lâun i lâaltra. EÌs magniÌfic veure com el personatge femeniÌ va agafant confiança alhora que sâallibera del jou dâun home mediocre i aprofitat. Knightley broda aquesta evolucioÌ, sobretot a partir del moment en queÌ comença a explorar la seva identitat sexual. En lâaltre costat de lâespectre, West aborda el paper del marit dibuixant amb subtilesa el perfil psicoloÌgic dâun paio que intenta emmascarar amb fanfarroneria les seves inseguretats meÌs profundes. Sense absoldreâl de les seves faltes, aconsegueix generar-nos una certa simpatia.
Sicario 2: Soldado
Tres años atrĂĄs, Denis Villeneuve dirigĂa un narcothriller sobre agentes del FBI de misiĂłn en MĂ©xico, donde hacĂa un retrato analĂtico e impresionante de las ambigĂŒedades morales de la guerra de AmĂ©rica contra las drogas. Ahora nos llega esta secuela, que es como ver un concierto de tu grupo de mĂșsica preferido, donde solo tocan el bajo y el baterĂa: faltan tres ases, la actriz Emily Blunt, el director de fotografĂa Roger Deakins y Villeneuve, claro. Y quizĂĄ por eso no es tan fascinante como la original, ni tan inteligente, aunque se mantiene en unas cuotas mĂĄs que notables. Volvemos a la frontera mexicana, que los cĂĄrteles utilizan para traficar con papelinas y personas. El director Stefano Sollima, conocido por la serie 'Gomorra', recrea este ambiente peligroso con todo tipo de detalles, donde nos encontramos un Benicio del Toro que tiene sed de venganza.
News (45)
Sundance Film Festival London: Five amazing films you can still get tickets for
The Sundance Film Festival is back in London next weekend (June 1-4), with four days of the buzziest and best in new independent cinema. Sundance has been a discovery zone for genuinely original films and new talent for 40 years from its HQ in the snowy mountains of Utah â giving Wes Anderson, Ava DuVernay and Quentin Tarantino their big breaks. The London mini-fest next weekend is a line-up of 14 feature films first shown at the mother fest in January, together with shorts and filmmaker talks, all at the gorgeous Picturehouse Central. Here are five gems with tickets still available.  1. âThe Incredible Jessica Jamesâ If you havenât heard of Jessica Williams, thatâs about to change. The force-of-nature actress-comedian (and ex-âDaily Showâ reporter) owns this sweet, sharply written romcom.Saturday June 3, 9.30pm 2. âBitchâ A woman is pushed to the edge by her douchey husband in this low-budget feminist comedy-horror. Her response? She finally snaps and starts behaving like the dog he treats her as. âBitchâ is written, directed and stars the Scottish filmmaker Marianna Palka.Friday June 2, 3.30pm 3. Redford Recommends: âMan on Wireâ New this year is Redford Recommends â screenings of three films that made a splash at the festival over the years, handpicked by Sundance founder and acting legend Robert Redford. âMan on Wireâ is James Marshâs Oscar-winning doc about the 1974 wire walk between the Twin Towers by Frenchman Philippe Petit â with no safety net or harnesses.Fri
London's choking: how toxic air is killing our city
The air youâre inhaling might look clean, but it isnât. Atmospheric pollution is still a killer in London. And, believe it or not, youâre more exposed to it on a bus than on a bike. Cath Clarke finds out more. A classic complaint of newbie Londoners is sniffing out black snot at the end of the day. I stopped noticing it years ago and, until recently, assumed air pollution was one of those things that science fixed back in the â80s, like acid rain. Then my friend was rushed to A&E with pneumonia. She got better but when she left hospital, a doctor told her that if she moved out of London, the improvement in air quality would increase her life expectancy. Can that be true in 2017? Do we genuinely need to worry about the air we breathe? The short answer is yes. The facts are brutal: nearly 9,500 people in London die prematurely from conditions related to air pollution every year. Living here could shorten your life. London kids are growing up with smaller lungs. We all have an increased risk of respiratory illnesses like asthma and lung disease. One doctor told me that whenever thereâs a winter smog (more on those in a bit), exactly five days later A&E departments see a spike in strokes and heart attacks. London exceeded its annual pollution limits in the first five days of this year. Londoners are more health-obsessed than ever (or at least more obsessed with avocados and green juice), so why donât we know and care more about the filthy air weâre breathing and demand a cleaner
There are plans for a new cinema in Bethnal Green
Itâs cinemas a-go-go in east London at the moment. In a few weeksâ time Clapton is getting a brand new cinema, The Castle, near Chatsworth Road (in an empty room above the Spar). Now we hear news of plans for an independent cinema in Bethnal Green. The idea is to reopen the old Rex on Bethnal Green Road as an affordable cinema for the community, alongside a cafĂ©/restaurant, around 150 hotel rooms and a rooftop garden. The decor will be in keeping with the Rexâs deco roots. The cinema originally opened as Smartâs Picture House in 1913. Its art deco facade was designed by legendary cinema architect George Coles in 1938, and the Rex finally closed in 1967. If youâre a Bethnal local, the organisers behind plans for the Rex have got two events coming up. Tonight, thereâs a formal public consultation for residents and council members to view plans and put questions to the architects and backers. And on Saturday, theyâre hosting a planting workshop, followed by short documentaries set in the East End.   Come and watch some short #films, eat some food, plant a seed and munch on some #propercorn this week. All to support the reopening of the old Rex #cinema on Bethnal Green Road. Drop-in and out as you wish, see you there. A photo posted by The Culpeper (@theculpeper) on Jan 18, 2017 at 2:48am PST  The Castle Cinema on Chatsworth Road is happening
Always wanted to make the Big Kahuna burger from âPulp Fictionâ? Now you can
No, itâs not strictly in the detox spirit of January. But if you love the taste of a good burger like Samuel L Jackson in âPulp Fictionâ, the Big Kahuna is now a reality, thanks to film-loving foodie YouTuber Andrew Rea. Everyone remembers Jacksonâs super-menacing appraisal of the Big Kahuna burger in the movie: âHamburgers, the cornerstone of any nutritious breakfast.' In fact, the Big Kahuna chain of Hawaiian-themed burger joints is fictional (though it does appear in other Tarantino films, âDeath Proofâ, âFour Roomsâ and âReservoir Dogsâ). In our food-obsessed times, Andrew Rea has gone a bit gourmet with his recipe for the burger. The original was pretty old-school, a beefy patty slapped between buns with a squirt of ketchup. Running with the Hawaiian theme, Rea adds caramelised pineapple and teriyaki sauce. Spot the difference?  YouTube/Andrew Rea   The Big Kahuna is the latest in Reaâs series, Binging with Babish, cooking up iconic dishes from the movies â including Monicaâs Thanksgiving sandwich from âFriendsâ. Now all we need is a $5 milkshake pop-up.    And here's the original:  Can't be arsed to cook? Sink your teeth into London's best burgers instead.
Remembering Carrie Fisher: the funniest interviewee ever
People sometimes ask: Who is the nicest person youâve interviewed? (Answer: Julianne Moore in New York; she invited me round to her house where her Labrador fell asleep on my foot). The nastiest? (A well-known British director who rolled his eyes at every question like I was asking: âWhatâs your favourite colour?â) And the funniest? Carrie Fisher.  It was summer 2014, and during a day off from filming âThe Force Awakensâ at the Star Wars bunker she chatted over Skype. Her French bulldog Gary sat on her lap, looking bored, tongue lolling like heâd just had a shot of anaesthetic for a sore tooth. Gary had recently won a prize for best doggie acting at a film festival, Fisher explained: âBut heâs still down to earth. He's very close to the ground.â Fame wasnât going to his head then? She shook her head. âNo, but the farting has got more intense.â  It may not always have been fun being Carrie Fisher. But by God, Carrie Fisher was always funny. In an age of celebrity blandness nothing was off the record for her. Not her bipolar disorder (âI just have too much personality for one personâ). Or Star Wars. (âGeorge Lucas ruined my life. And I mean that in the nicest possible wayâ). Her memoir âWishful Drinkingâ is wall-to-wall hilarious and uncensored anecdotes.   Carrie Fisher    First question. Why did you sign up to play Princess Leia again after all these years? âI liked the hair!â she answered, untruthfully as it turned out, since Leia ditched the Danish pastry buns for
âIt can happen to anyoneâ: Daisy-May Hudson on her shocking homelessness documentary âHalf Wayâ
I was in the library in Manchester writing my dissertation when I got a phone call from my mum saying that our landlord had decided to sell off our house in Epping, out towards the Essex end of the Central line. It had been our family home for 13 years. We tried to find somewhere else, but there was nothing we could afford because of the dramatic rise in rents in the area. So I came back from uni, and in between my finals and graduation we put all our stuff into boxes and moved into a hostel â me, my mum and my 13-year-old sister. Before it happened to me, I had preconceptions about who becomes homeless. Maybe I was a bit naive, but I didnât think you could go so quickly from such security to having nowhere to live. It was a big shock. The first hostel we moved into was a converted army barracks. It smelt stale and had really harsh unnatural light. It didnât feel homey at all. We were lucky enough to get two rooms, so we put all the contents of our house in one room and lived in the other one â all three of us sleeping in one room. We shared a bathroom and a kitchen with another family. There was no internet, so applying for jobs was difficult. All the normality of going to bed, having a bath â it all goes. We were living on top of each other. My mum loves cooking and a kitchen table is important to her â thatâs where we share our day. But in the hostel, her self-esteem was so low that she didnât cook any more. She was tired and stressed so sometimes we ended up just eating
Take care London: pollution levels out there are sky-high (and fireworks aren't helping)
Since the weekend, autumn fog has shrouded London in a gorgeous photogenic mist. Which, as it turns out, is terrible news for our lungs. Pollution monitors dotted around the city are pinging with harmful levels of air pollution. The high pollution is being caused by a double whammy of foggy weather (still winds allowing pollutants to build up under the mist) plus fireworks celebrating Diwali and Bonfire Night. One monitor in Harlington near Heathrow recorded it highest possible level, 10/10, on October 31. We spoke to Andrea Lee, a healthy air campaigner with ClientEarth, a charity of international environmental lawyers, who told us that high air pollution is a regular visitor to London in November: âAround this time of year, you can get pollution spikes because of bonfires. But this year the fog is exacerbating the problem and the calm weather is also allowing the usual source of pollution, road transport, to build up.â ClientEarth is currently suing the UK Government over air pollution levels. charlatan33    Pollution is a massive problem in London, causing nearly 9,500 premature deaths every year â thatâs 100 double-decker buses full of people dying early. But unlike the pea-soupers of the 1950s, we canât see the tiny particles that are killing us and are mostly caused by diesel engines. Sadiq Khan announced plans in August for air quality alerts at bus stop and tube stations. You can also keep track of air pollution levels with an app. Try City Air or Plume. Help cr
A sex cinema pop-up is coming to London this weekend
Forget about pervy old men in dirty macs. This sex cinema, billed as âLondonâs last peepshowâ, is the brainchild of supercool erotic magazine Baron & Baroness. Itâs called the Paradiso Cinema, has 30 seats and is open for three days only, this weekend at the Ditto gallery in Islington. Keeping our minds in the gutter and on art, Baron & Baroness has curated a highbrow series of shorts about sex and sexuality by artists and photographers. Films include âThe Last Peep Show in Sohoâ by Edith Bergfors, a lesbian romcom by Eori Wakakuwa and âAngelsâ by Sarah Baker, inspired by Jackie Collins novels. Talking to the Evening Standard, founder of Baron & Baroness Matthew Holroyd explained his thinking: âWeâre playing on the idea of a sex cinema⊠When we visualise sex and the moving image it is pornography that most people will think of, but sex can have a higher value than that.â Tickets cost ÂŁ10 and include a drink. The cinema will have its own sex shop and thereâs a kind of disturbing addition to the snack list: popcorn, beverages and handwipes. More entertainment news: â The 'Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life' trailer is finally here â and it's an absolute nostalgia-festâ 'The Great British Bake Off' star Selasi on Cronuts, London life and staying chilled on the tubeâ Benedict Cumberbatch isn't that happy about his face being on 'Doctor Strange' lunchboxes
Sadiq Khan is making his sitcom debut
We already knew that Sadiq Khan can tell a joke. He told us a rude one about the health secretary Jeremy Hunt when we interviewed him in September to launch Time Outâs Love London awards. Now comes news that the Mayor is making his first appearance in a sitcom, with a cameo in the new series of âCitizen Khanâ, the BBCâs cosily old-fashioned comedy about loud-mouthed, tight-fisted Birmingham community leader Mr Khan. Watch Sadiq Khan's rude joke about Jeremy Hunt  Personally, weâd have killed to see Sadiq in season two of âFleabagâ. (He could have played one of the customers Fleabag rips off £25 for a cheese sandwich). But weâll settle for the cameo in the season opener of âCitizen Khanâ, in which Mr Khan ends up sleeping in his car after forgetting his wedding anniversary. Sadiq tells Time Out: 'I don't want Fabric closing down. It's a great night out.'
Deadpool fans launch a petition for Quentin Tarantino to direct the sequel
Fans have launched an online petition to persuade Quentin Tarantino to sign-up to Marvelâs âDeadpool 2â, after the filmâs director Tim Miller consciously uncoupled with the project last week â reportedly over creative differences with Ryan Reynolds, who stars as the foul-mouthed anti-superhero.   So far the Change.org petition has over 3,000 signatures. It was started by Carl Champion Jr, who writes: âIf there was ever a chance to see Tarantino do a project almost guaranteed to make a billion dollars, this is it. We got a great taste of what this could be like in âKill Billâ, but imagine having a guy like Tarantino write dialogue for The Merc with the Mouth! It would be so glorious. Join me!â Tarantino might be a perfect fit for super-violent âDeadpoolâ â the black sheep of the Marvel-verse. But can you really imagine the motor-mouthed, massively ego-ed filmmaker directing a sequel? Nah. Us neither. Besides, Tarantino's heart belongs elsewhere in Marvel. Here he is talking to the Nerdist Podcast last year. âOne of the outside projects that I considered doing was a Luke Cage movie. Luke Cage was my hero when I was a kid collecting comic books. He was my favourite character.â âDeadpoolâ smashed box office records this year, becoming the highest earning X-rated movie of all time and making made $786 million worldwide. The sequel is expected in cinema in January 2018.  More entertainment news: â Selasi from 'The Great British Bake Off' is going to open a bakery in west Lond
Thereâs a Kickstarter campaign to save Dorothyâs ruby shoes from 'The Wizard of Oz'
Click your heels three times, or donate a few quid â time is running out to save Dorothyâs ruby red shoes. A museum in Washington has launched a Kickstarter campaign to raise $300,000 to rescue the fast deteriorating âWizard of Ozâ slippers using the hashtag #KeepThemRuby. The slippers, which took Judy Garlandâs Dorothy back to Kansas in the 1939 film, are 77 years old and they're showing their age â faded to a sad, dull red. After two days, the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History's campaign has already raised nearly $115,000, which suggests the future is already looking brighter. The money raised will also pay for a state-of-the-art case to preserve the slippers in a displayable condition for generations to come. You can help conserve Dorothy's Ruby Slippers. Why we need your help to display them for 20+ years: https://t.co/oYHBSCZqr7 #KeepThemRuby pic.twitter.com/9nBmfG3cgu â amhistorymuseum (@amhistorymuseum) October 18, 2016 The ruby shoes (which were silver in the 1900 novel by L Frank Baum) are actually one of four pairs worn in the film. They were discovered in 1970 at MGM's studios. One pair was stolen from The Judy Garland Museum in Minnesota in 2005 and has never been found. In 2012, Leonardo DiCaprio led a campaign to buy another for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Each pair is reported to be worth $3 million. More entertainment news: â Netflix's 'Watership Down' is 100% going to traumatise a new generation of childrenâ Choose⊠caref
Noel Gallagher turned down âTrainspottingâ because he thought it was about actual trainspotters
It's one of the greatest soundtracks ever â a pure blast of â90s Britpop from the likes of Blur, Elastica and Pulp, alongside classics by Iggy Pop and Lou Reed. The one band weirdly missing from 'Trainspotting' is Oasis. Now we know why. The film's costume designer Rachel Fleming recently met Noel Gallagher, who admitted that he got completely the wrong end of the stick when Oasis were approached for the 1996 film. Here's Fleming, explaining: âHe said to me: âI would have done something, but honestly I thought it was about trainspotters. I didn't know.ââ    Fleming was talking at a twentieth anniversary screening of âTrainspottingâ alongside the filmâs producer Andrew Macdonald, who remembered how keen the film's director Danny Boyle was to get Oasis involved at the time. But, according to The Telegraph who reported the story, Macdonald mostly kept shtum about the upcoming 'Trainspotting' sequel: âIt's 20 years later and they have all moved on,' Macdonald shared. 'They are at different places in their lives and some of them may even have children.â We do know that all four lead actors will be back, Ewan McGregor, Ewen Bremner, Jonny Lee Miller and Robert Carlyle, with Boyle directing again. The plot is inspired by âPornoâ, Irvine Welshâs âTrainspottingâ sequel, and the film is out on January 27 2017. Watch the âTrainspotting 2â trailer Â