Eno review – exhilarating Brian Eno documentary that’s different at every screening
Gary Huswit’s suitably innovative profile of the mercurial British musician, activist and artist uses specially developed software to create endless iterations of the same film - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe Commandant’s Shadow review – family of Auschwitz commander bring healing to death-camp survivor
The son and grandson of Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss appear in Daniela Volker’s engrossing documentary, a companion piece to Zone of Interest - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarBushman review – amazing real-time evocation of a Nigerian’s life in 70s America
Paul Eyam Nzie Okpokam plays a lightly fictionalised version of himself in David Schickele’s restored 1971 film reflecting on race and nationality - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThe Conversation review – Gene Hackman is unforgettable in Coppola’s paranoid classic
Hackman’s surveillance expert Harry Caul is inexpressibly sad and lonely – a classic and poignant American everyman - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarFrancis Alÿs: Ricochets review – children of the world unite in a health and safety nightmare
From Cuba to Mexico, from Hong Kong to Iraq, the Belgian artist has made 40 mesmerising films of kids at play, including three with guns up to no good in a war zone - Adrian Searle
starstarstarstarstarNetwork review – terrific 1976 news satire is an anatomy of American discontent
Peter Finch won a posthumous Oscar for his uproarious performance as a swivel-eyed news anchor – a cross between Billy Graham and Donald Trump - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarYes festival review – a marvellous appreciation of Molly Bloom
A two-year celebration of the centenary of James Joyce’s Ulysses culminates in a female-led, cross-border, multidisciplinary festival dedicated to the protagonist’s wife - Clare Brennan
starstarstarstarstarGreen Border review – an angry and urgent masterpiece about Europe’s migrant crisis
Agnieszka Holland’s vital drama about refugees stranded between Belarus and Poland could hardly be more topical - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarAgent of Happiness review – serene, slow-burning documentary from Bhutan
In the famously content Buddhist country, a government inspector interviews citizens to measure their wellbeing in a gently humorous film that doesn’t avoid dark themes - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarLonglegs review – Maika Monroe and Nicolas Cage grip in brooding horror thriller
Monroe plays a dogged, antisocial FBI agent on the trail of Cage’s occult serial killer in the latest buzzy, atmospheric film from Osgood Perkins - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarHundreds of Beavers review – Gold Rush-style spoof silent comedy fires gags at warp speed
Combining Chaplin, Keaton and Looney Tunes, the utter silliness of this movie pastiche, with an army of full-sized beavers, will win you over - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarSchlitter: Evil in the Woods review – tightly crafted horror turned DIY torture tutorial
Director Pierre Mouchet’s film is a showcase of economy, style and woodwork skills as three friends stay over at a lumberjack’s house and experience his ingenious ways to inflict pain - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarIn a Violent Nature review – horror unplugged is quietly gruesome
Director Chris Nash departs from genre cliches to deliver a fascinatingly different slasher movie in which danger strikes amid the beauty of the great outdoors - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarSleep review – marriage unravels in gleeful Korean somnambulist psycho-chiller
Lee Sun-kyun appears posthumously in one of his best performances as an actor struggling to control his night-time excursions in this elegant and intimate horror - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarSing Sing review – powerful, deeply felt drama takes theatre behind bars
Oscar nominee Colman Domingo leads an impressive ensemble in a gentle and inspiring story of incarcerated men finding joy in an acting program - Radheyan Simonpillai
starstarstarstarstarThe Pawnshop review – humour and humanity in Poland’s massive second hand shop
Everyone is down on their luck in the biggest used-goods store in Silesia, but director Łukasz Kowalski finds beauty in many small acts of kindness - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarThe Fifth Seal review – a spiky political cabaret of cruelty and fear
Zoltán Fábri’s 1976 film follows military veteran Karoly in wartime Hungary as he asks fellow drinkers in a bar what they would choose: be the slave master or the slave - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThe Nature of Love review – opposites attract in sizzling French-Canadian romcom
Sparks fly between a lecturer and a builder, but are they enough, wonders director Monia Chokri in this vibrant romance - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarUnicorns review – mechanic meets drag queen in touching drama with real-world edge
Ben Hardy and Jason Patel excel in Sally El Hosaini’s gritty romance as a straight single white dad and a closet Asian nightclub performer navigate their mutual attraction - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe Mummy review – Brendan Fraser’s action-adventure is as lovably goofy as ever
Fraser’s dashing American soldier of fortune ventures to the ancient Egyptian city of the dead in this good-natured and entertainingly silly film - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarKill review – ultraviolent Indian train thriller is finger-cracking good
This tasty piece of action cinema provides crunches, squelches and and spatter effects as the good guys and bad guys delightfully smash each other to pieces - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarBarbie: The Exhibition review – the wonder doll’s evolution, from Gehry homes to ‘gay Ken’
Deep dive into the pink plastic universe charts society’s cultural, design, fashion and body-image changes – reflected in the life of the world’s most popular doll - Oliver Wainwright
starstarstarstarstarThe Imaginary review – charming anime about made-up best friends from former Ghibli protege
Spirited Away animator Yoshiyuki Momose takes the reins in this dreamy and dark family fable, adapted from AF Harrold’s novel of the same name - Rebecca Liu
starstarstarstarstarThe Mother of All Lies review – pursuing the truth of Morocco’s brutal dictatorship years
Asmae El Moudir employs a delicate mix of handmade replicas and oral testimony to brilliantly evoke personal and collective trauma - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarPortrait of My Father review – mysterious death of father is start-point of riveting film
Juan Ignacio Fernández Hoppe’s documentary tries to pin down a true record of the father he lost aged eight, but the struggle to find it is what compels attention - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarA Quiet Place: Day One review – stylish and satisfying prequel
Lupita Nyong’o stars as a poet with cancer who wants to live a little in this beefed-up disaster movie set in New York - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe Imaginary review – beguiling fantasy from Japan’s Studio Ponoc
A young girl and her made-up friend are separated in an exquisitely drawn anime reminiscent of Studio Ghibli - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarEternal You review – thought-provoking look at new AI product for the grieving
Disturbing documentary explores tech’s questionable ability to bring digital ‘comfort’ to the bereaved - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarFancy Dance review – Lily Gladstone is sublime in moving Native American family drama
Erica Tremblay’s debut feature boasts another remarkable performance from the Killers of the Flower Moon star as a tough outsider on a road trip with her teenage niece - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarKalki 2898 AD review – maximalist sci-fi epic mixes Mahabharata with Mad Max
Amitabh Bachchan plays a mythological warrior in a withered dystopian city where desert car chases, CGI magic and a semi-divine dictator rule - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarMaXXXine review – a horribly watchable Hollywood tale of sex, death, fear and gore
Mia Goth returns for the third chapter of the X trilogy as an adult film star trying to take a crack at horror while a serial killer stalks the city’s sex workers - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarBye Bye Tiberias review – heartfelt memoir of Palestinian family reunion in Galilee
Hiam Abbass, AKA Marcia Roy from Succession, returns to the village she left 30 years ago to become an actor, with her daughter Lina Soualem behind the camera - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarA Greyhound of a Girl review – Roddy Doyle story is beautiful take on childhood grief
Heart-lifting adaptation of Doyle’s children’s novel follows cheeky 12-year-old Mia as she faces the loss of her beloved granny - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarThe Bikeriders review – sharp, seductive 60s biker drama
Jeff Nichols adapts photographer Danny Lyon’s late-60s biker gang adventure, with stellar performances from Jodie Comer, Austin Butler and Tom Hardy - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarI Am: Céline Dion review – an earnest love letter from one of the last true divas
The queen of power ballads lets fans in on her private battle with stiff-person syndrome in a new Amazon Prime documentary. - Adrian Horton
starstarstarstarstarDiane von Fürstenberg: Woman in Charge review – hedonist fashion-biz phenom has tales to tell
Inventor of the wrap dress, sexual adventurer and a legendary celebrity – this amusing, affectionate doc is a tribute to someone with lots to say - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarSomething in the Water review – Bridezilla vs Jaws as shark stalks seagoing wedding party
A group of women on their way to a marital celebration are plunged into a nightmare in this tense survival thriller - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarA Dry White Season review – Marlon Brando heads starry cast in ground-breaking apartheid drama
This first Hollywood studio feature with a black female director is a compelling account of a South African who turns against the ruling caste - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThe Paddington Bear Experience review – the Marmalade Day jamboree must go on!
Visitors get stuck in when they enter the world of 32 Windsor Gardens, thanks to a merry immersive show boasting hands-on games and evocative design touches - Chris Wiegand
starstarstarstarstarDespicable Me 4 review – Baby Gru Jr enlivens another brush with villainy
The latest addition to Gru’s family punches above his weight in terms of gags and visual humour as the animated franchise rolls on - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarFly Me to the Moon review – Scarlett Johansson delights, but 60s space-race romance fails to lift off
A deliciously minxy Johansson and buttoned-up Channing Tatum make strange bedfellows in this Nixon-era tale of Nasa’s lunar programme - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarChariots of Fire review – breathless staging of classic Olympic dash
The perseverance of runners Harold Abrahams and Eric Liddell is well conveyed with stage and auditorium becoming training ground and racetrack - Catherine Love
starstarstarstarstarEno review – stimulating and cerebral look at the high priest of art-tech experimentalism
Produced using software that means that the film is different every time it is shown, this presents the former Roxy Music man as a restlessly creative mind - Steve Rose
starstarstarstarstarTwisters review – Glen Powell and Daisy Edgar-Jones find whirlwind romance in weather-hacking 90s sequel
Feelings fly between Edgar-Jones’s tornado-halting scientist and AI-handsome Powell’s storm-chasin’ YouTuber. Just don’t mention climate change - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarAgent of Happiness review – Bhutan surveyors attempt to analyse joy
Two assessors ask questions but it’s the detail and nuance that is so compelling in this gently absorbing documentary - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarA Prince review – queer erotic drama of sexual enlightenment through gardening
Pierre Creton’s literary film is about the carnal blossoming of a gardener’s apprentice under the tutelage of a series of older men - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarMaXXXine review – Mia Goth chills in grisly conclusion to Ti West’s horror trilogy
Goth excels as porn star and aspiring actor Maxine Minx, who makes the leap to horror movies as a killer stalks the Hollywood Hills in this predictable end to the X series - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarOrlando, My Political Biography review – inventive spin on Virginia Woolf’s novel
Trans director Paul B Preciado uses Woolf’s classic text as a literary exploration and an intimate personal journey to powerful effect - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarUnicorns review – drama of queer south Asian club culture with added superstar drag queens
Jason Patel is excellent as drag queen Aysha in Sally El Hosaini and James Krishna Floyd’s new film, but the scenes where Aysha visits her parents as Ashiq really steal the show - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarWhat Remains review – sky squid confounds Stellan Skarsgård in true-life Scandi noir
Skarsgård and his son Gustaf sparkle in Ran Huang’s rarefied film, but can’t rescue this weirdly hallucinatory murder mystery from falling flat - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarYounger review – rousing study of female athletes excelling in their 60s and beyond
Inspiring women explain what motivates them to keep training, and how getting older can give them the competitive edge - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarOrlando, My Political Biography review – Woolf’s trans hero gets a 21st-century mashup
Tricksy documentary spin on 1928 novel weaves fact and fiction to reconsider and reimagine the time-travelling story for our time - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarLoop Track review – no escape for tormented hiker on horror trek to creature-feature hell
Writer-director Thomas Sainsbury plays a twitchy divorcee who wants to get away from it all, but this intriguing journey disappoints at the final hurdle - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarDespicable Me 4 review – Gru goes into witness protection to keep Minion magic alive
Steve Carell’s everyvillain starts a dull new life but nemesis Will Ferrell’s Maxime Le Mal has other ideas - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThe Nature of Love review – philosophy professor’s life spiced up by rugged labourer
A middle-aged woman’s has a giddy fling in Monia Chokri’s latest film – at first all is roses, but then moral murkiness creeps in - Ryan Gilbey
starstarstarstarstarThe Sparrow review – grief and guilt haunt teenager in dark West Cork tale
Ollie West is superb as a sensitive misfit who inadvertently causes a terrible tragedy in this atmospheric family drama - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarHorizon: An American Saga – Chapter 1 review – Kevin Costner’s unapologetically old-school western
Satisfying momentum builds in this involving but inauthentic first instalment of the Hollywood star’s mega-epic of settlers and Native Americans - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarKinds of Kindness review – Yorgos Lanthimos reunites with Emma Stone for overlong but admirable triptych
Stone, Jesse Plemons and Willem Dafoe head the cast in the Poor Things director’s odd three-part study of control whose central idea proves elusive - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe Marilyn Conspiracy review – suspects and detectives convene for Monroe mystery
A doctor, a therapist and the Kennedy brothers are among the characters in this cocktail of facts and fiction - Arifa Akbar
starstarstarstarstarMean Girls review – Tina Fey’s high-school classic gets musical spin for the Insta era
Plastics and fellow students give high-grade performances but the songs and production don’t get quite enough As - Chris Wiegand
starstarstarstarstarA Quiet Place: Day One review – noise-free alien-invasion prequel starts with a bang
The latest in the alien-terror series finds Lupita Nyong’o connecting with stranger Joseph Quinn as the monsters terrorise a city into trembling silence - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarFancy Dance review – Lily Gladstone shines in knotty Native American family drama
Film-maker Erica Tremblay tells a thoughtful tale about a woman’s battle to care for her niece against backdrop of the authorities’ ambivalence towards Native American peoples - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarDance Revolutionaries review – performers dance like nobody’s watching
This two-part homage to dance greats Robert Cohan and Kenneth MacMillan captures the intimacy of live performance - Georgie Wyatt
starstarstarstarstarEternal You review – death, download and digital afterlife in the age of the AI griefbot
Unsettling documentary considers whether the increasingly popular simulations of lost loved ones are really helping the bereaved - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarX Trillion review – all-women voyage to the ‘Pacific garbage patch’ packs a rousing punch
This film following a group travelling 3,000 miles to investigate plastic pollution reveals some shocking truths, even if it feels a little light on science - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarFreelance review – John Cena fun in kind of pulpy action-comedy Arnie used to make
Cena and Alison Brie bring the genre up to date, with the pair comically adept enough to rescue this rescue mission from being a lame duck - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarThe Investigator review – harrowing documentary details search for justice after Balkan wars
Viktor Portel’s film follows Czech investigator Vladimír Dzuro as he returns to sites of torture and death, and meets survivors as well as supporters of perpetrators - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarFederer: Twelve Final Days review – a must-watch for tennis fans
Asif Kapadia and Joe Sabia’s warm appreciation of the Swiss champion takes the emotional days before his retirement as its starting point - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe G review – OAP revenge thriller
Dale Dickey steals the show in this twisty tale of a not-so-helpless little old lady targeted by crooked legal guardians - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarTrigger Warning review – Jessica Alba returns in solid Netflix action vehicle
The actor makes a decent bid for action stardom with her first movie in five years, a derivative yet watchable attempt to kick off a new franchise - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarThe Emu War review – wall-to-wall silliness that will make you laugh-out loud, sometimes
This viscerally cockamamie comedy maintains enjoyable momentum, even when gun-toting puppet birds begin to attack - Luke Buckmaster
starstarstarstarstarThe Convert review – Guy Pearce tries to keep the peace in Māori period drama
Lee Tamahori captures the might and majesty of Aotearoa in this stately film, with Tioreore Ngatai-Melbourne giving an electric performance - Luke Buckmaster
starstarstarstarstarSleeping Dogs review – not quite total recall for Russell Crowe in over-the-top pulp-noir
Crowe plays an ex-cop receiving treatment for dementia who revisits one of his old cases, only to unearth some uncomfortable but entertaining memories - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarSuper Seniors review – the near-miraculous feats of tennis players in their 80s and 90s
Former pro Dan Lobb’s perky documentary follows the irrepressible athletes as they compete for glory in their age groups’ world championships - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarJade review – big hair and high kicks from the new Foxy Brown
Shaina West’s heroine thwacks, hacks and quips her way through this pulpy action movie, leaving Mickey Rourke and his henchmen in her wake - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarDeadland review – melancholy horror smuggles deep themes across the US-Mexico border
Lance Larson’s feature debut uses horror tropes to tackle themes of racism, immigration and post-traumatic stress disorder - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarInspector Sun and the Curse of the Black Widow review – cosy eight-legged crime caper
Our hapless arachnoid investigator bumbles through jazz age intrigue with some charm, but spinning out the slender plot gets a little tiring - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarThe G review – Dale Dickey is gamechanging gangster granny out for vengeance
Dickey is a revelation as a harder-than-nails woman exploited by the US’s legal guardian system in an otherwise overcooked thriller - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarPongo Calling review – Roma lorry driver turns viral activist after political persecution
Film-maker Tomáš Kratochvíl follows the story of Czech-Mancunian trucker turned activist Štefan Pongo - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarLonglegs review – Nicolas Cage is a miscast killer in misfiring hokum
A distractingly outsized performance is one of many unsuccessful elements in Osgood Perkins’ stylish yet progressively silly horror - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarFly Me to the Moon review – slinky Scarlett Johansson in cynical moon-landing conspiracy comedy
This misjudged and unfunny romcom about how the US government planned to fake the moon landing in case the real one tanked undermines the Apollo 11 achievement - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThine Ears Shall Bleed review – occult horror-western heads into the wilderness
A 19th-century preacher is seduced by the devil in this atmospheric but meandering debut feature - Antonia Langford
starstarstarstarstarCarbon & Water review – sexual fulfilment of a gay man in his 60s is little-explored territory
An isolated older man falls for his nurse in a well-intentioned but erratically edited film undercut by poorly written characters with lengthy, repetitive dialogues - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarProblemista review – Tilda Swinton stars in whimsical odd-couple visa drama
An aspiring toy designer from El Salvador clings to a monstrous New York art world figure in Julio Torres’s sub-par indie - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarBeverly Hills Cop: Axel F review – Eddie Murphy’s megawatt charisma lights up creaking sequel
Reprising his role as lovable undercover cop Axel Foley, the actor – and some full-on car-chase carnage – can’t disguise a plot several decades past its sell-by date in debut director Mark Molloy’s slickly packaged action comedy - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarCash Out review – John Travolta invests in Fast and Furious style failed-heist caper
Action thriller begins with glossy vibes, but loses the champagne-fuelled aspirations too soon and wastes co-star Kristin Davis - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarProblemista review – quirky hipster comedy lets Tilda Swinton go for the laughs
Swinton almost, but not quite, rescues this film by SNL star Julio Torres with its Wes Anderson-esque onslaught of cutesy kookiness - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarBeverly Hills Cop: Axel F review – fish-out-of-water Eddie Murphy chases past glories
Murphy’s maverick cop – and his theme music – are back to fight corruption, but four decades on there’s little energy to enliven their formulaic reunion - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarBlue Lock the Movie: Episode Nagi review – football anime gets the battle royale treatment
From Terminator-eyed strikers to flame-wreathed shots on goal, no bombast is too much in this feature-length extrapolation of Muneyuki Kaneshiro’s popular series - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarA Family Affair review – Nicole Kidman’s hot age-gap romance quickly goes cold
Zac Efron plays a heartless airhead movie star who is much too hastily transformed into Kidman’s Mr Perfect - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarRose review – Sofie Gråbøl works hard in heartfelt healing journey through schizophrenia
Director Niels Arden Oplev has written movingly of his intimate knowledge of the mental illness, but this story is soaked in treacly good taste - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThe Last Breath review – Julian Sands’s last film is solid shark-meets-shipwreck thriller
A group of friends are terrorised by a shark while exploring a shipwreck in an unremarkable film that marks Sands final outing onscreen - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarThe Exorcism review – frighteningly bad horror remake with Russell Crowe
Nothing, not even a demonically possessed Crowe, can redeem this trope-filled, slap-dash echo of the 1970s classic - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarSomething in the Water review – contrived shark thriller with no hidden depths
A wedding party takes a boat ride into dangerous waters in a debut film drowning in banality and cliches - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe Exorcism review – Russell Crowe v the Devil in cursed horror about a cursed horror
The actor plays an actor struggling with a demonically bad film shoot in a well-made yet increasingly messy chiller - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarRite Here Rite Now review – soft-metallers Ghost offer skits and shreds in fan-service film
Concert footage, theoretically bolstered with frontman Tobias Forge’s feeble skits, seems likely to please only the diehard types - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarA Gangster’s Kiss review – lairy and sweary British crime-com goes to all the places you’d expect
The escapades of this cast of colourful hard men could have been written by Jay from The Inbetweeners - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarDivorce in the Black review – Tyler Perry’s dull drama is his worst to date
A couple edge toward a split in the writer-director’s shoddy Amazon Prime offering, carelessly made and dull to watch - Andrew Lawrence
starstarstarstarstarSpace Cadet review – Emma Roberts joins Nasa in lazy streaming slop
There are shades of Legally Blonde and Private Benjamin in Amazon’s lesser, low-rent comedy about a Florida bartender with dreams of being an astronaut - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarPoolman review – Chris Pine makes splash of totally wrong kind in shambolic stoner comedy
Pine writes, directs and stars – alongside Danny DeVito and Annette Bening – in this rambling comedy mystery about a shaggy, quirky pool attendant - Steve Rose
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