Lone Star review – John Sayles’s powerful crime drama is an extraordinary relic of 90s film-making
Sayles’s 1996 film tackles racial division in Texas as a sheriff uncovers dark secrets about his home town and his father’s past - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarMy Neighbour Totoro review – Miyazaki’s supernatural masterpiece still enchants
Studio Ghibli’s inspirationally lovely film about a girl’s encounter with a gentle creature only becomes more beguiling with repeated viewings - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarWerckmeister Harmonies review – Béla Tarr’s brooding masterpiece of a town sleepwalking into tyranny
Tarr and Ágnes Hranitzky’s 2000 film moves slowly around a small town where a very strange circus has arrived. Its eerie power has only grown in a time of rising fascism - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarBroken Bird review – creepily brilliant psych-horror of control-freak funeral-parlour attendant
Rebecca Calder is superbly supple as the damaged protagonist in a richly imagined horror story - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarParadise Is Burning review – teens survive on wits in dreamy coming-of-age drama
Mika Gustafson’s feature has some obvious influences in The Virgin Suicides or American Honey but wears them lightly in this fresh and beautifully cut debut - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarBlack Dog review – state-of-the-Chinese-nation drama with feelgood furry antics
A squadron of dog catchers, sent into the Gobi desert to round up a bevy of hounds, adds stark absurdism to this commentary on Chinese society - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarBlink Twice review – Zoë Kravitz’s thrilling, chilling directorial debut
Naomi Ackie and Channing Tatum star in Kravitz’s superbly twisted romance, which takes gender politics into a brutal combat zone - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarBetween the Temples review – bittersweet screwball comedy with shades of Harold and Maude
Playing a bereaved synagogue cantor and his former primary school music teacher, Jason Schwartzman and Carol Kane light up Nathan Silver’s endearing odd couple tale - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarKneecap review – fictionalised origin story is one of the funniest films of the year
Belfast rappers Kneecap use the Irish language as their weapon in Rich Peppiatt’s exhilarating comedy drama co-starring Michael Fassbender - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarNothing But the Best review – raffish Alan Bates comedy is a time capsule of 60s London
Millicent Martin and Denholm Elliott also star in Clive Donner’s 1964 satire on class, filled with macabre twists - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarLollipop review – impassioned, head-butting indictment of the social-care system
Informed by her own experiences, Daisy-May Hudson’s portrait of a woman trying to regain custody of her kids is surprisingly even-handed - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarBetween the Temples review – Jason Schwartzman and Carol Kane charm in quirky comedy
Actors sell an unusual, compelling friendship as a widower reconnects with an old teacher in this thoughtful film - Adrian Horton
starstarstarstarstarAudrey review – a deliciously snarky comedy about a girl in a coma
Jackie van Beek and Hannah Diviney star in Natalie Bailey’s feature debut, which explores a thorny taboo with gallows humour - Luke Buckmaster
starstarstarstarstarHollywoodgate review – chilling fly-on-the-wall glimpse of the Taliban’s takeover of Kabul
Granted unprecedented, if strictly limited access, Egyptian documentarian Ibrahim Nash’at captures the Taliban’s inner circle after the US withdrawal from Afghanistan - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarAlien: Romulus review – thrillingly gruesome new instalment gets a shot of young blood
The ever-impressive Cailee Spaeny heads a cast of fresh-faced alien fodder in Fede Álvarez’s propulsive sci-fi horror, which favours horror over storyline - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarDaughters review – tender, wrenching film about a dance date for girls and their jailed dads
Four girls look forward to being reunited with their fathers in Natalie Rae and Angela Patton’s painful yet lyrical Sundance-winning documentary - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarKlitschko: More Than a Fight review – Kyiv’s mayor confronts Zelenskiy in eye-opening Ukraine war film
Kevin Macdonald’s documentary follows the former boxer in charge of Ukraine’s capital as he deals with the fallout of the Russian invasion - Andrew Pulver
starstarstarstarstarEllis Park review – like its subject, Warren Ellis documentary moves to the beat of its own drum
Justin Kurzel’s film about the Bad Seeds and Dirty Three musician, and the animal sanctuary he founded in Indonesia with activist Femke den Haas, is richly cinematic - Luke Buckmaster
starstarstarstarstarA Life Like Any Other review – wonderfully moving look back at a mother’s resilience
Faustine Cros’s documentary revisits home videos from her childhood through fresh eyes having learned as an adult what her young self had missed - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarTuesday review – Julia Louis-Dreyfus shines in fatalistic fairytale
A teenage girl is visited by death – in the form of a parrot – and her mother is having none of it in Daina O Pusić’s striking feature debut - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarBabes review – Pamela Adlon’s caustically funny pregnancy comedy
Ilana Glazer and Michelle Buteau fizz in the Better Things creator’s directorial debut, a rapid-fire riff on pregnancy, motherhood and female friendship - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarRadical review – Mexican inspirational teacher drama rises above genre cliches
Based on true events, this tale of a deprived school being turned on its head by the arrival of Mr Juárez feels fresh, largely thanks to its superb young cast - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarDaughters review – heartbreaking record of girls and their imprisoned fathers
Angela Patton and Natalie Rae’s documentary about a ‘daddy-and-daughter’ prom for prisoners is an intimate window on lives torn apart by mass incarceration in the US - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarAlma’s Rainbow review – 90s New York tale of Black womanhood and sexuality is worth the wait
A teenager rebels against her mother’s respectable values in this 4K restoration of Ayoka Chenzira’s feature debut from 1994 - Ellen E Jones
starstarstarstarstarDìdi review – bittersweet Asian American coming-of-age drama
Wang’s award-winning debut is a tender, semi-autobiographical portrait of a 13-year-old skateboarder and his devoted immigrant mum in 00s California - Ellen E Jones
starstarstarstarstarThe NeverEnding Story review – a wondrous world of beasts and young heroes
A grieving boy is drawn into a magical land in Wolfgang Petersen’s ambitious fantasy adventure, rereleased for its 40th anniversary - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarKnock Out Blonde: The Kellie Maloney Story review – trans boxing promoter fights for identity
After steering Lennox Lewis to world heavyweight success, her transition to Kellie was a tabloid sensation. This intimate and moving documentary tells us much more - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarDìdi review – impressive Asian-American teen-angst drama takes the unconventional route
Sean Wang’s semi-autobiographical film offers a cool approach, swerving the usual coming-of-age tropes - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarA Story of Bones review – the battle to right Saint Helena’s colonial wrongs
This moving story documents the long struggle to bury the mass remains of Africans who were ‘liberated’ from the slave trade in a way that memorialises the island’s past - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarThree review – Yugoslavian trilogy of tales tracks the horrors of the second world war
Aleksandar Petrović’s 1965 interlinked stories focus on the changes wrought in one young Yugoslavian by the brutality of the war and its aftermath - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThe Echo review – insightful study of an isolated community
Tatiana Huezo captures the rhythms of life and locals’ thwarted dreams in her keen portrait of a Mexican village - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarI Saw the TV Glow review – powerfully unnerving teen misfit drama
A mysterious late-night TV show unites two disaffected adolescents in Jane Schoenbrun’s haunting, 90s-set allegory - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarAbout Dry Grasses review – rich, engrossing Turkish epic with a twist
A village teacher is accused of inappropriate behaviour in Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s handsome, beautifully performed, three-and-a-half-hour fable - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarMandoob (Night Courier) review – darkly amusing gig-economy satire on the mean streets of Riyadh
Director Ali Kalthami’s bleak and funny portrait of toxic masculinity was a massive hit in its home country of Saudi Arabia - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarBroca’s Aphasia review – Taiwanese sex doll service offers eerie insight into male domain
Su Ming-yen’s uncanny delve into the world of artificial women is both fascinatingly mundane and quietly unsettling - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarLast Things review – stones yield up their memories in poetic vision of life on Earth
Deborah Stratman’s film looks far beyond humanity for answers to the big questions of survival, gathering the words of scientists and imaginative writers - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarThe Mountain Within Me review – feelgood climbing doc is hard to resist
Former rugby player Ed Jackson overcomes a devastating spinal injury to take on mountains in Polly Steele’s handsome if formulaic film - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarCuckoo review – Hunter Schafer and Dan Stevens carry bonkers Alpine body horror
The Euphoria star plays a US teen uprooted to a dodgy German spa resort, where Stevens is in full scenery-chewing mode, in Tilman Singer’s hot mess of a thriller - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe Killer review – John Woo’s John Woo remake is a low-stakes fun time
The director revisits his 1989 classic with a Paris-set update that doesn’t attempt anything all that daring but reconfirms his action credentials - Jesse Hassenger
starstarstarstarstarBlink Twice review – Zoe Kravitz’s stylish yet scattered #MeToo thriller
There are deafening echoes of Get Out, Don’t Worry Darling and The Menu in this propulsive yet ultimately unwieldy attempt to use Epstein’s island as genre inspiration - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarKneecap review – Irish-language hip-hop trio in fiercely riotous Belfast romp
The story of Northern Irish teenagers who reinvent the political purpose of hip-hop, the film is most uproarious when the energy of the music lets loose - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarTogether With Lorenza Mazzetti review – compelling final testament from overlooked director
The Italian director, whose film Together made a key contribution to the Free Cinema movement in the UK, died in 2020 but this interview is a fitting tribute - Andrew Pulver
starstarstarstarstarThe Mountain Within Me review – disabled heroes take on the Himalayas
Documentary traces Ed Jackson’s extraordinary journey from paraplegia to extreme climbing, and follows him through spectacular landscapes - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarHell Hole review – creature feature is fracking fun
A crew of engineers drilling in Serbia find more than they bargained for in this endearing, low-budget horror from the Adams family - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarThe Home Game review – sweet and heartwarming story of Iceland’s footballing underdogs
This plucky documentary tells of the small town whose residents created its first football pitch, and the years that followed chasing their goal - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarWidow Clicquot review – vine-whispering champagne-maker gets the biopic treatment
Barbe-Nicole Ponsardin Clicquot ascends from demure young lover to patriarchy-defying innovator in this attractive but not quite grand cru biopic - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarAdam Ondra: Pushing the Limits review – Czech Spider-Man climbs all the way to Olympics
Jan Šimánek and Petr Záruba’s intimate documentary reveals the vulnerabilities behind sporting success as rock climber Ondra trains for Tokyo 2020 - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarHostile Dimensions review – goofy no-budget horror opens portal to a parallel world
When a graffiti artist vanishes through a freestanding door, two film-makers open up a wittily told mystery - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarCadejo Blanco review – compelling performances in slow-burn drug gang thriller
Lead Karen Martínez is impressive as a young woman searching for her sister among drug gangs in Guatemala in Justin Lerner’s suspenseful movie - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarClandestina review – artists fighting fascists in Portugal in the 1950s – and the present day
The words of artist-activist Margarida Tengarrinha ground Maria Mire’s feature debut, which evokes a lineage of political dissent through ambiguous visual sequences - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarFaye review – where are all the hair-raising stories of Dunaway’s nightmare behaviour?
This misty-eyed homage to Bonnie and Clyde star Faye Dunaway (with her involvement) papers over her reputation for being difficult – but is still a troubling portrait - Rachel Aroesti
starstarstarstarstarOnly the River Flows review – stylishly enigmatic Chinese crime drama
An overburdened detective investigates a series of murders in 1990s rural China in Wei Shujun’s slow-burning noir - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe Union review – Halle Berry and Mark Wahlberg heat up Netflix action flick
The stars’ rapport helps retain your interest in a preposterous international caper that has something vaguely to do with justice - Adrian Horton
starstarstarstarstarCoraline review – delightfully creepy coming-of-age fantasy offers more than just scares
Henry Selick’s adapted from Neil Gaiman’s book about a young girl who finds new parents with buttons for eyes is a nifty stop-motion animation - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarOnly the River Flows review – accomplished Chinese noir is intriguing and ingenious thriller
An ambitious police detective attempts to solve a series of murders from a disused cinema in director Wei Shujun’s crime drama - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarBlack Dog review – fine lead performances power British road movie on a satisfying path
Two former schoolfriends team up and head to Scotland on a journey that carries us through some cliched stops - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarThe Hypnosis review – watch-through-your-hands squirmfest as woman loses inhibitions
A big-money business pitch is threatened when a tech entrepreneur’s unpredictable inner child is unleashed after hypnotherapy - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarSwan Song review – ‘punk rock’ ballet film goes behind-the-scenes to get show afloat
The National Ballet of Canada’s prep for a new production of the biggest ballet there is, while bidding farewell to artistic director Karen Kain, is subtly handled in a nuanced documentary - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarIt Ends With Us review – Blake Lively stars in oddly frothy domestic abuse drama
Dark themes lurk behind the stylish veneer in this adaptation of Colleen Hoover’s bestseller, directed by co-star Justin Baldoni - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarLuce review – enigmatic Italian drama of dreams and drones
A young woman’s breakdown – or is it an epiphany? – in coastal Italy, in Luca Bellino and Silvia Luzi’s film, does not surrender its meaning easily - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarIt Ends with Us review – Blake Lively anchors glossy romance adaptation
Colleen Hoover’s smash hit novel gets a winning and emotionally effective transfer to the big screen - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarCaligula: The Ultimate Cut review – 1970s Roman empire sex shocker returns to the source
Without the extra sex that made writer Gore Vidal want his credit removed, Tinto Brass’s epic of imperial eroticism showcases a powerhouse Malcolm McDowell - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarCuckoo review – stylish horror offers atmosphere with incoherence
Euphoria’s Hunter Schafer is a convincing scream queen in this Germany-set chiller which prioritises mood over plot - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarRadical review – Mexico’s heartwarming answer to Dead Poets Society makes the grade
Based on the true story of an inspiring teacher arriving in an impoverished school, this bullies you into uplift but succeeds thanks to its top quality cast - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarTogether 99 review – quarter-century reunion for Lukas Moodysson’s Swedish commune comedy
Moodysson reunites the gang of hippies from his joyful 2000 sendup for a fun yet slightly sour sequel - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarThe Last Human review – despair and hope for Greenland youth in crosshairs of climate peril
Ivalo Frank’s documentary draws in deep science about the origins of life on Earth along with warm portraits of the young people who face environmental crisis - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarA Place Called Silence review – suspenseful Malaysian high school horror reboot
Sam Quah’s entertaining but caricature-filled Chinese remake of his 2022 film about bullying and worse has been a box-office hit across Asia - Ellen E Jones
starstarstarstarstarKensuke’s Kingdom review – impeccably elegant animation of Michael Morpurgo adventure
Beautifully hand-drawn, with a screenplay by Frank Cottrell Boyce exploring deep themes, is this adaptation too classy to have wide appeal? - Ellen E Jones
starstarstarstarstarSaving Bikini Bottom: The Sandy Cheeks Movie review – another enjoyably madcap SpongeBob adventure
An incredibly game Wanda Sykes leans in to the evil inventor trope as the gang follow their favourite scientist squirrel to the Lone Star State in a bid to save their world - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarKensuke’s Kingdom review – Michael Morpurgo’s desert island boy’s own adventure
Morpurgo’s yarn about a kid on a round the world voyage is adapted by Frank Cottrell-Boyce and attractively packaged as a family-friendly animation - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarElephant Mother review – sensitive animal documentary with a happy ending
Conservationist Lek Chailert helps elephants recover from gruelling working lives in Thailand with joviality and grit in this engaging film - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarAlma’s Rainbow review – early 90s coming-of-ager is gem of black female empowerment
Pioneering director Ayoka Chenzira gives voice to the inner lives of women at a time when they were mostly ignored, making this film a rare gift to treasure - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarA Place Called Silence review – secrets and lies in high school dripping with horror
Sam Quah brings real artistry to story of buried guilt and conspicuous violence, but his neat contrivances tie things up rather too easily - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarLight Falls Vertical review – startling domestic violence memoir goes deep into past trauma
Jarring and heartbreaking documentary excavates the film-maker’s past while illuminating an abuser’s place in the cycle of violence - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarOutside Noise review – dreamy twentysomethings wander around Europe in charming study
Ted Fendt’s portrait of three young women at creative crossroads follows their listless strolls and awkward gatherings with warm vitality - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarDeadpool & Wolverine review – Marvel’s achingly meta new sequel is going to be huge
Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman’s superhero odd couple are flung together in a gagtastic if sloppy action comedy that maxes out its 15 certificate - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarFarming the Revolution review – low-key look at Indian farmers’ street-camp protests
Documentary on the 2020-21 protests in India over three farm acts is interesting in patches, but doesn’t go anywhere unexpected - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarWidow Clicquot review – grande dame of champagne biopic falls flat
Neither Haley Bennett as the Veuve Clicquot heir nor the film’s proto-feminist messaging can bring this bubbles-to-riches drama to life - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarIncoming review – Netflix’s Superbad-esque comedy is super unfunny
Raucous teen film about out-of-control high school party never finds its footing, relying on tiresome gross-out humor - Adrian Horton
starstarstarstarstarThe Supremes at Earl’s All-You-Can-Eat review – female friendship saga falls flat
Adaptation of Edward Kelsey Moore’s novel has admirable intentions and terrific cast but is too rushed to soar - Radheyan Simonpillai
starstarstarstarstarThe 39 Steps review – comic homage to Hitchcock thriller goes off the rails
With four actors playing 130 parts, this revival of Patrick Barlow’s take on the spy film is fitfully funny but ultimately frustrating - Chris Wiegand
starstarstarstarstarNoah’s Ark review – Old Testament’s got talent in biblical kids’ animation
The animals on Noah’s ark have a singing contest under the eye of a familiar leonine villain, amid a flood of unoriginal gags - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarLore review – Brit-horror anthology tells its gruesome stories around the campfire
Richard Brake is well cast as the host for this portmanteau of grisly yarns, where the girls’ tales are made of stronger stuff than the boys’ - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarJackpot! review – feeble Paul Feig action comedy maxes out on the mayhem
The best efforts of Awkwafina and John Cena can’t save this flailing tale of an LA lottery win gone wrong - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe Deliverance review – Lee Daniels exorcism horror brings strong cast to real-life story
Daniels’s film starts well as it points up the social pressures that informed the Latoya Ammons case, but succumbs to tired horror tropes - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarAlien: Romulus review – grungy, back-to-basics instalment goes over same old ground
Fede Álvarez’s effort is scrappier than Ridley Scott’s grandiose efforts – but everyone involved would have been better employed working on something new - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarJackpot! review - Awkwafina and John Cena strapped into stunt-heavy action comedy
The efforts of a strong cast to make a future dystopia into knockabout fun result in a discordant mismash of general ridiculousness - Adrian Horton
starstarstarstarstarThe Instigators review – Matt Damon and Casey Affleck languish in heist caper misfire
Doug Liman directs the usually bankable duo in this disappointingly slow and predictable crime comedy - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarOzi: Voice of the Forest review – simian version of Greta Thunberg takes on evil corporation
Orangutan Ozi is a simian Greta Thunberg in a film whose excellent animation is let down by underdeveloped characters and blind faith in social media activism - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarBorderlands review – Cate Blanchett is wasted in janky video game adventure
The Oscar winner tries to rise above Eli Roth’s juvenile and derivative adaptation of the hit game but gets lost in the mess - Jesse Hassenger
starstarstarstarstarTuesday review – kooky macaw is angel of death for Julia Louis-Dreyfus in hipster silliness
If only the brilliant Louis-Dreyfus and Lola Petticrew had been left to handle the black comedy without help from a zany avian - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarChris Thorburn: Cineman review – heard the one about Sex Times at Spring Break High?
This movie-mad comic lampoons Hollywood through sketch and song but some of his material could have been left in the cutting room - Rachael Healy
starstarstarstarstarDuchess review – sneers and smiles in noughties throwback Brit-crime revenger
A heroine who looks good in Lycra and a love interest with no chemistry don’t leave you wanting more, despite Duchess’s sequel-friendly ending - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarHarold and the Purple Crayon review – sketchy live-action adaptation
Uncharismatic Zachary Levi plays the 50s children’s character whose drawings spring to life in a film lifted by Clement’s villainous novelist - Ellen E Jones
starstarstarstarstarTrap review – M Night Shyamalan’s concert thriller is a mess
Josh Hartnett plays a serial killer trapped at a pop show in a suspense-free dud that acts as embarrassing promotion for the director’s daughter - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarThe Instigators review – Matt Damon and Casey Affleck can’t save underpowered heist comedy
The Ocean’s Eleven veterans star in this Boston-set caper about a broke ex-marine and a moody ex-con hired to rob the mayor’s victory party - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThe Crow review – unfathomably awful goth remake
Rupert Sanders’ attempt to resurrect the 1994 cult revenge thriller has become one of 2024’s most atrocious films - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarBorderlands review – Cate Blanchett stalks her way through woeful video game adaptation
The Australian star heads a big-name cast who can do nothing to save Eli Roth’s incoherent sci-fi action comedy - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarGracie and Pedro review – star names can’t make up for charmless cat and dog odd couple
By-the-numbers animation does nothing to lift cliched tale that squanders the talents of A-list actors including Bill Nighy and Susan Sarandon - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarHarold and the Purple Crayon review – garish and charmless kids fantasy dud
Zachary Levi makes for a miscast lead in a poorly thought- out adaptation of Crockett Johnson’s classic picture book - Jesse Hassenger
starstarstarstarstar