Entertainment for all ages, with excellent writing, this is not a film to be missed. Go with the kids, go with your mates or just go on your own. It’s worth it.
If you can look past the "America is great" sensibility, you will be rewarded with a well-paced, well-acted, brutally intense tale of brotherhood.
With strong performances and an old but no less relevant message Out of the Furnace will catch your attention but it may also leave you wanting just a little bit more.
At best it’s just another run-of-the-mill scary movie.
With big ideas and a capable cast RoboCop will surprise. It's just a pity it falls short at the final hurdle when you need the action to match the high-minded ideas it’s built on.
Under The Skin's off-kilter creepiness and nods to a slew of cinematic predecessors mark this as a singularly brilliant and memorable achievement.
Surprisingly funny and with plenty of heart Cuban Fury is worth a trip to the cinema. Plus it's got Nick Frost, he's great.
A fun, sloppy, American Pie style movie with a good heart, some terrible dialogue and many laugh-out-loud moments. See it if you're a fan of Zac Efron. Or if you're a dude, Imogen Poots (She's a good excuse to see this movie, fellas).
The “third generation” feels shaky in the time period Wolf covers, which is part of why it’s so fascinating. It’s easy to make a film about the hip-shaking, war-hating hippies and punks of the 1950’s onwards – the period 1904-45 is certainly not one remembered for the waves of youths. But with so many lost in war and hopeless rebellion, remembering this generation is clearly something important – the stories of the four narrators come together to portray the teenager as we know it about to be born.










