Kate Bush: Little Shrew review – this devastating film will make you weep at war’s violence against children
Written, directed and soundtracked by Bush, built up from sketches she drew herself, this four-minute animation is suffused with both love and horror - Ben Beaumont-Thomas
starstarstarstarstarThe Warriors review – Lin-Manuel Miranda and Eisa Davis come out to play with firecracker musical
This concept album based on Walter Hill’s 1979 film features megastar rappers, Hamilton alumni and styles from metalcore to salsa – it is pulled off with breathtaking brio - Chris Wiegand
starstarstarstarstarCarrie review – Brian De Palma’s horror masterpiece is a death metal spectacle of carnage
Sissy Spacek unforgettably evolves from ugly duckling to swan to something else entirely in the groundbreaking film of Stephen King’s novel - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarHeretic review – religious horror with a suave, dapper and evil Hugh Grant
Two young missionaries visit a man at his cavernous house to discuss Mormon doctrines but get drawn into a psychological game of terror and manipulation - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarGodzilla Minus One/Minus Color review – magnificent monster in mono
Black and white re-release of one of the fire-breathing lizard’s best outings looks terrific and has an intriguingly ambiguous human lead actor - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarTurn Me On review – dystopia’s kindly new manners
Michael Tyburski’s intelligent and funny film features a young couple seduced by an apparently bland regime promising to tidy away messy emotions - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarSlingshot review – Casey Affleck is impeccable in solid sci-fi saga
An unexplained impact leaves a mission to Saturn’s moon, Titan, in catastrophic danger, with Affleck and a skeleton crew struggling to keep a grip on reality - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarWallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl review – first they came for the trousers. Then they came for the robot gnome
Feathers McGraw is back and implacably frightening as ever in Aardman’s latest, belated outing for everyone’s favourite cheese eating duo - Catherine Shoard
starstarstarstarstarDahomey review – Mati Diop’s exquisite tale of repatriation
In this lyrical hybrid documentary, the French director brings to life 26 stolen artefacts as they make their way from Paris back to Benin - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarBlack Box Diaries review – Japanese journalist’s courageous documentary about her own rape ordeal
Shiori Itō’s account of her sexual assault by a high-profile colleague, and her fight for justice, is a tough but important watch - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarEmilia Pérez review – Jacques Audiard’s riotously entertaining trans Mexican cartel musical
The veteran French director takes a huge gamble with this gritty crime thriller turned glitzy soap opera boasting standout performances from Zoe Saldaña, Karla Sofía Gascón and Selena Gomez - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarA Nightmare on Elm Street review – jauntily outrageous slasher is still cheerfully crass
Johnny Depp makes his film debut in Wes Craven’s imperfect but entertaining horror that still has considerable black-comic energy - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarWatership Down review – charming rabbit animation still has power to terrify
A band of rabbits must leave their warren to find safety in a film that, even in a digital age, still has the bloody force to scare young minds - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThe Room Next Door review – Almodóvar’s English-language debut is extravagant and engrossing
Julianne Moore and Tilda Swinton give luxuriously self-aware performances as two old friends who are reunited in a doggedly mysterious drama - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarBlack Box Diaries review – inside the remarkable events that triggered Japan’s #MeToo movement
Japanese journalist Shiori Itō tells how she pursued her rape case against a prominent TV executive - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarWoman of the Hour review – Anna Kendrick’s 70s-set true crime thriller is a winner
A serial killer tale unfolds in California’s TV land in the US actor’s fine directorial debut, in which she also stars - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarA Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things review – vivid portrait of 20th-century artist Wilhelmina Barns-Graham
Mark Cousins’s poetic documentary about the late St Ives-based Scottish artist is among his finest films - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarSmile 2 review – horribly entertaining fright sequel
Naomi Scott shines as a troubled pop star in Parker Finn’s even more gruesome follow-up - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe Wild Robot review – lost-in-the-jungle Roz joins animation’s robot greats
Superbly voiced by Lupita Nyong’o, the star of DreamWorks’ classy adaptation of Peter Brown’s bestseller learns to survive on a harsh, uninhabited island - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe Apprentice review – Jeremy Strong is the Trump card in measured biopic of the Donald
The Succession star chills as US lawyer Roy Cohn opposite Sebastian Stan as his grasping protege Donald Trump in Ali Abbasi’s intriguing drama - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarSaint Maud review – desire, despair and ‘godgasms’ as Rose Glass’s shocker comes to life
Brogan Gilbert gives an extraordinary performance as the troubled nurse caring for a terminally ill dancer in a compelling adaptation of the 2019 horror film - Chris Wiegand
starstarstarstarstarThe Remarkable Life of Ibelin review – moving tale of disabled gamer’s digital double life
Using World of Warcraft-style animation, this documentary tells the story of Mats Steen, a boy with muscular dystrophy whose online popularity was only revealed after his death - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarA Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things review – lovingly eccentric ode to a forgotten abstract painter
The work of the late Scottish artist Wilhelmina Barns-Graham is brought to life by this idiosyncratically persuasive Mark Cousins film - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThe Wild Robot review – heartfelt animated adventure is a soaring success
Peter Brown’s much-loved novel gets turned into a dazzling big-screen film for all ages that’s one of the year’s most entertaining animated offerings - Adrian Horton
starstarstarstarstarSince Yesterday: The Untold Story of Scotland’s Girl Bands review – the joy and the fury
This documentary about pioneering female musicians is brilliant – yes, there’s misogyny and betrayal but mainly it’s the sheer elation of being in a gang - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarMadS review – one-shot French horror is an impressive exercise in tension and mood
A joyriding teenager drives headlong into the zombie apocalypse in David Moreau’s euphorically nihilistic film - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarMilisuthando review – a life haunted by, and isolated from, the horrors of apartheid
As a child, Milisuthando Bongela was unaware of white-supremacist South Africa, only to later wake up to the realities of a racialised political system - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarEndurance review – Shackleton’s ill-fated Antarctic expedition, relived
Shackleton’s remarkable 1914 mission gets a stirring retelling by the directors of Free Solo as a fine cast of experts search for the remains of his ship - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarTransformers One review – action-packed prequel adds brains to the metal monster smash-ups
Toy Story 4 director Josh Cooley brings a blast of energy, sharp wit and an all-star voice cast to this refreshingly different origin tale - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarSuperboys of Malegaon review – boisterous heartwarmer about movie-loving underdogs
Inspired by a true story, this feelgood Indian film is about some Bollywood superfans making their own movies with a cheeky but admirable DIY ethos - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarA Traveler’s Needs review – Isabelle Huppert hypnotises in cool Korean comedy of manners
Huppert plays Iris, a modestly dressed French woman living in Korea who gives French lessons according to a strange procedure of her own that does not seem to involve speaking French - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarIn Restless Dreams: The Music of Paul Simon review – heartfelt portrait of a generational talent
From his era-defining work with Art Garfunkel to the sometimes problematic legacy of 80s hit Graceland, Alex Gibney’s documentary strikes a pure and personal note - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarTerrifier 3 review – killer clown is tooled up for third helping of gleeful gorefest
Not everyone will have the stomach for this much gore, but for genre aficionados this Christmas killing spree is a cut above - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarA Long Journey Home review – family pressures reach boiling point in a shocking documentary
It’s almost painful to watch this oppressive autobiographical film, pieced together from footage the director shot in her family’s Chinese home - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarListen Up! review – tonally jarring comedy on multicultural integration and teenage trans identity
This curate’s egg of a film’s crude humour feels somewhat at odds with the big issues it’s exploring, even if doing so more or less sympathetically - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarJuror #2 review – Clint Eastwood puts Nicholas Hoult in court … and an unusual pickle
The 94-year-old director has delivered a courtroom thriller that pits justice against self-preservation - Ryan Gilbey
starstarstarstarstarMartha review – sharp if spotty Netflix retrospective on Martha Stewart
The ‘doyenne of domesticity’ proves a blunt and at times frustratingly opaque yet always compelling subject in a new documentary - Adrian Horton
starstarstarstarstarThe Moogai review – Stolen Generations trauma feeds a haunting horror film
Jon Bell’s bold and daring film about a mother who is stalked by a child-stealing bogeyman is a little underdeveloped - Luke Buckmaster
starstarstarstarstarMusic by John Williams review – the man behind the soundtracks, from Star Wars to Superman
Steven Spielberg, Yo-Yo Ma and Chris Martin contribute to this fascinating if fleeting glimpse into a remarkable career that also encompasses Jaws, Indiana Jones and Harry Potter - Imogen Tilden
starstarstarstarstarThis Search for Meaning review – slick reminder of radical rockers Placebo
Eye-opening archive footage and a Bowie appearance are the highlights in an otherwise polite but bland documentary - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarMidas Man review – Jacob Fortune-Lloyd is heartfelt as Beatles’ kingmaker
As the ‘fifth Beatle’ Brian Epstein, Fortune-Lloyd’s performance holds an otherwise sanitised narrative together in well-meaning biopic - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarDr Strangelove review – Steve Coogan scores a quadruple cold war coup
Adding a fourth role to Peter Sellers’ three turns in the classic film, the comic excels in a fun yet unadventurous adaptation - Arifa Akbar
starstarstarstarstarFreedom (Libre) review – Lucas Bravo oozes charisma as gentleman robber
This frothy film tells the true-crime story of the so-called polite bandit Bruno Sulak, who goes on a crime spree in 1980s France, but insists his gang never fire their guns - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarThe Delights review – in-depth look at rural schoolboys reveals a hidden Argentina
An agro-technical boarding school is the subject of this striking documentary, which offers vignettes of growing pains and childlike wonder - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarThe Divided Island review – emotional stories from all sides of the Cyprus conflict
Cey Sesiguzel’s documentary covers a lot of history – and not always in the most dynamic way. But the testimony of survivors of war forms its powerful core - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarMatt and Mara review – freewheeling Canadian romance
Small moments speak volumes as a poetry professor and a novelist rekindle their friendship in Anne at 13,000ft director Kazik Radwanski’s latest - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarThe World of Tim Burton review – a tour around a singular creative mind
The director is the subject of an immersive touring show that ranges from his drawings since childhood to Michelle Pfeiffer’s Catwoman outfit - Rowan Moore
starstarstarstarstarThe Room Next Door review – Almodóvar’s stylish end-of-life drama feels emotionally empty
Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore seem constrained in the Spanish director’s uneasy first English-language film, winner of this year’s Venice Golden Lion prize - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarCanary Black review – Kate Beckinsale kicks impeccably chic ass in gender-flipped Taken
Oblivious he’s married to a spy, Beckinsale’s husband is kidnapped – cue the baddies demanding a secret file, some fancy action sequences, lots of gunshots and a nice trenchcoat - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarDon’t Move review – high-concept Netflix survival thriller has its moments
A grieving woman is paralysed by a psychopathic serial killer in a solid Sam Raimi-produced shocker that boasts some genuine suspense - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarRoad Diary: Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band review – still blowing minds after 50 years
Thom Zimny deftly weaves archive footage, recent live performance, candid interviews and fan tributes to create a rich portrait of a modern icon and his legendary band - Ben Beaumont-Thomas
starstarstarstarstarThe World of Tim Burton review – Johnny Depp’s scissorhands can’t cut through the cobwebs and corpses
The Design Museum, LondonThis world-touring exhibition showcases the kooky, gothy director’s early passions and obsessions – but he’s no Edgar Allan Poe - Jonathan Jones
starstarstarstarstarFamily Pack review – Jean Reno is game for a laugh in card-based time-travelling caper
A family playing a game are sent back in time to a medieval village where they must kill werewolves in order to return to the future - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarKenya review – Mexican trans sex worker seeks justice for murdered friend
Gisela Delgadillo’s pulsating debut documentary on the streets of Mexico City follows the magnetic Kenya and her tireless efforts to provide a voice for community - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarThe Crime is Mine review – Isabelle Huppert and co revel in Ozon’s frothy French crime caper
Set in 1930s Paris, François Ozon’s theatre-world courtroom comedy is a fizzing if throwaway delight - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarSmile 2 review – gory pop star horror sequel sings a familiar tune
Glossier follow-up to 2022’s hugely successful curse horror is well-made and well-acted but the franchise is struggling to carve out its own identity - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarThe Rubber-Keyed Wonder: The Story of the Sinclair ZX Spectrum review – glory and geekery
Home computing and the gaming industry have their origins in the iconic early 80s hardware, documented here in an homage to an eccentric pioneer - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThe Crime Is Mine review – François Ozon’s 1930s crime comedy is a moreish crowdpleaser
Ozon and a stellar cast serve up an entertaining, if shallow caper that shades a little too close to #MeToo - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarTom Petty: Heartbreakers Beach Party review – 80s solid-rock nostalgia fest is a trip
Fans of the singer’s hits, fluffy mullets (and young Cameron Crowe) are well-served by unseen and remastered footage as this sweet look back ticks all the relevant rock doc boxes - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarSweet Bobby: My Catfish Nightmare review – flawed Netflix documentary still shocks
The jaw-dropping facts of an elaborate catfishing scheme will surprise those unfamiliar with the story, but they are revealed in a rushed and perfunctory film - Adrian Horton
starstarstarstarstarStudio One Forever review – affectionate look back at LA’s legendary gay club
Frequented by those looking for a refuge from homophobia, this documentary charts the history of the venue and the effort to save its cultural legacy - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarJoy review – warm and intensely English portrayal of the birth of IVF
Bill Nighy, James Norton and Thomasin McKenzie form the unlikely trio who doggedly, quietly and courageously made the discovery that would change lives around the world - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarMy Hero Academia: You’re Next review – old-style superhero battle anime with hint of the surreal
The fourth film spin-off from the daffy Japanese X-Men knock-off beams its dream-like action into a flying fortress where victims are turned into superfolk - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarKathleen Is Here review – cuckoo-in-the-nest drama-thriller has a properly nailbiting ending
A young woman leaving the care system returns to her childhood home is a strong directorial debut from acclaimed Irish actor Eva Birthistle - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarKulej. Dwie Strony Medalu review – glossy boxing biopic is Poland’s answer to Raging Bull
An overlong, overly lightweight tale of Poland’s two-time Olympic champion Jerzy Kulej is saved by a rallying last half hour - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarGarçonnières review – male insecurities revealed as film goes back to the man cave
Céline Pernet places a number of willing volunteers in front of a camera and asks them a series of candid questions, and the responses form a fascinating tapestry of experience - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarHaunted Ulster Live review – mock Halloween broadcast evokes the spectre of Ghostwatch
Amiable lo-fi horror film presents itself as a live broadcast from a haunted suburban home. It’s well crafted – though unlikely to scare viewers the way the 1992 BBC mockumentary did - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarJigra review – Alia Bhatt is lethal and luminous in sibling jailbreak thriller
Bhatt plays a woman trying to spring her brother from prison in a fictional East Asian state, after he is framed by their rich-kid cousins - Adrian Horton
starstarstarstarstarLonely Planet review - Laura Dern and Liam Hemsworth heat up beach-read travel romance
A novelist meets a financier two decades her junior at a writers’ retreat in Morocco, in this welcome addition to a flurry of age-gap romances released this summer - Adrian Horton
starstarstarstarstarTimestalker review – Alice Lowe’s anti-romcom is a darkly hilarious spin through history
The actor and film-maker’s ingenious comedy sees her play a gamut of characters who meet gory ends chasing a not-worth-it love interest - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarBuffalo Kids review – CGI old west adventure with a big, warm heart
Three children and a puppy traverse 19th-century America in this wholesome family film – which is especially admirable for its representation of disability - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarBlitz review – Steve McQueen’s rousing wartime adventure is surprisingly old-fashioned
The director unexpectedly channels The Railway Children as Saoirse Ronan stars as the single mother whose son is evacuated, only to run away in a perilous bid to find her - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarHumanist Vampire Seeking Consenting Suicidal Person review – ethical kills for teen bloodsucker
This offbeat coming-of-age horror comedy about a vampire with qualms about killing humans is stylishly shot by first-time feature director Ariane Louis-Seize - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarDaddy’s Head review – a creature emerges from grief in clever British psychological horror
Director Benjamin Barfoot explores how heartbreak connects with darkness as pre-teen Isaac sees his dead father return - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarThe Three Michaels review – trio of Michael Jackson lookalikes reach for the stars
Documentary follows a group of dedicated celebrity impersonators who band together to turn their passion into a decent living - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarSuper/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story review – fascinating tribute undermined by bombast
The life of the actor who played Superman before becoming paralysed, told by his own children, is poignant enough so why the cod-mythic animations and pompous music? - Ryan Gilbey
starstarstarstarstarTime Cut review – tinny time-travel Netflix slasher offers too much deja vu
The streamer’s gimmicky and over-familiar Halloween offering sees a teen going back to 2003 to save her sister from a masked killer - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarThe Last Front review – old fashioned first world war drama fights familiar battle
Iain Glen is a sturdy presence leading a Belgian village’s resistance to the German advance, but there are limp scenes and soggy cliches aplenty - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarSecrets of a Wallaby Boy review – low budget romp-com tracks delivery rider round his route
Nice performances from the leads aren’t enough to save this comedy about a bawdy bike courier from floundering in a slew of crass sex jokes - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarVenom: The Last Dance review – Tom Hardy’s jaded antihero carries messy Marvel finale
Alien parasites are only half the problem as Hardy’s Eddie Brock battles existential demons and an incoherent plot - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarVenom: The Last Dance review – messy sequel ends series with a shrug
Tom Hardy’s agreeably silly Marvel franchise wraps things up in a patchy final adventure that needed a tighter, and funnier, script - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarMy Freaky Family review – overly quirky and unforgivably mawkish animation
This children’s film about a normal girl in a magical family strives for zany, anarchic fantasy. Unfortunately it’s just boring - Luke Buckmaster
starstarstarstarstarClassified review – Aaron Eckhart hitman thriller mines newspaper ads for coded messages
There is shockingly bad dialogue and a lot of extras waiting to fall over dead as Eckhart’s killer for hire finds all is not what it seems - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarRebellious review – hero princess kidnapped by evil witch in tale looking for feminist cred
Even with a feisty female protagonist the convulted plot of this kids’ animation is full of outdated stereotypes and barely scrapes past the Bechdel test - Cath Clarke
starstarstarstarstarMatt and Mara review – lo-fi answer to When Harry Met Sally offers uncertain relationship
This lo-fi Canadian dramedy feels like an excursion into nothing much, as a vague college friendship is rekindled - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarBrothers review – throwaway madcap comedy wastes a host of stars
Peter Dinklage, Josh Brolin, Glenn Close, Marisa Tomei and Brendan Fraser are lost in this brief and silly Amazon caper about low-level criminals - Jesse Hassenger
starstarstarstarstarCome Alive! review – acrobatic spectacle squanders The Greatest Showman’s songs
While there is strength and skill on display, this circus show lacks a knockout performance and the film’s enduring anthems don’t always fit the action - Chris Wiegand
starstarstarstarstarThe Apprentice review – cartoon version of chump-in-chief Donald Trump’s early years
Ali Abbasi’s film presents young Donald as an amoral narcissist, wastes the talent of Jeremy Strong and includes a grisly rape scene that is quickly glossed over - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarMembers Club review – male strippers meet bloodthirsty witches in gory comedy horror
Hapless dance troupe Wet Dreams get a taste of the dark arts when they’re lured to a gig to raise the dead. Plus: a cameo from Peter Andre - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarChildren of the Pines review – David Lynch-style teen-angst horror takes a big leap
The emphasis is on the psychological in Joshua Morgan’s ambitious debut feature of family dysfunction, but it just doesn’t come together - Catherine Bray
starstarstarstarstarTimestalker review – reincarnation romcom with nowhere to go
A woman pursues her beloved across centuries in Prevenge director and star Alice Lowe’s intriguing yet disappointing second feature - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarSalem’s Lot review – anaemic adaptation of Stephen King’s 70s vampire novel
Don’t expect any deeper themes in Gary Dauberman’s clunking take on the US writer’s much-adapted small-town horror - Wendy Ide
starstarstarstarstarEndurance review – search for Shackleton’s Antarctic wreck overshadowed by history
Shackleton’s truly perilous 1915 ordeal – gussied up with colourised footage and AI voices – minimises the stakes of a 2022 hunt for its remains by Dan Snow and friends - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarThe Last of the Sea Women review – female Korean divers as picturesque eco-feminist tradition
Sue Kim’s film about South Korea’s underwater fishers has everything from nuclear pollution to sexism to cover, but sticks to bland reportage - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarStuntman review – spirited love letter to golden age of Hong Kong’s action movies
Stephen Tung plays a former 80s director-stuntman drawn back into the present-day action-film industry as it faces an identity crisis - Leslie Felperin
starstarstarstarstarIn Her Place review – true-crime drama of a court worker fascinated by author in the dock
Based on a real murder in Chile in the 1950s, Maite Alberdi’s fictional story of obsession has glamour and style, but no intensity - Peter Bradshaw
starstarstarstarstarTake Cover review – Scott Adkins hitman thriller makes Fast & Furious look like Gilbert and Sullivan
Adkins’ veteran hitman goes against all action movie wisdom to accept ‘one last job’ – and promptly gets trapped in a hotel room and shot at - Phil Hoad
starstarstarstarstarSound of Hope: The Story of Possum Trot review – Sound of Freedom followup is a test of faith
Based on remarkable work in a small Texan community to adopt children considered ‘too difficult’ to foster, the film gets lost in saccharine cliche - Phuong Le
starstarstarstarstarHere review – cursed Forrest Gump reunion is a total horror show
The director reunites with Tom Hanks and Robin Wright for an ugly de-aged nightmare that boringly follows the same house throughout time - Benjamin Lee
starstarstarstarstarDark Feathers review – erotic hitwoman thriller approaches The Room levels of kitsch disaster
Star and co-director Crystal J Huang plays a ballroom-dancing geisha assassin in this preposterous LA melodrama - Phil Hoad
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