Donald Clarke: Why is marriage still so popular?Far from being obsolete, weddings are louder, gaudier and more expensive than everSat Oct 03 2015 - 04:00
Macbeth review: There will be royal bloodPropelled by impressive central performances from Fassbender and Cotillard, this is one of the strongest film versions of the Scottish Play yetFri Oct 02 2015 - 11:17
The Martian review: the vacuum-packed potatoes save the dayMatt Damon grows spuds on Mars in Ridley Scott’s best film in a decade. That must have been some decade...Fri Oct 02 2015 - 11:16
By Our Selves review: a delightfully barmy meditation from Andrew KöttingIain Sinclair, Alan Moore, Toby Jones and a Straw Bear retrace a walk poet John Clare once took. What more could you want?Fri Oct 02 2015 - 11:15
The Suffragettes and the keeper of the Pankhurst flameAs a descendant of the movement’s first family, Helen Pankhurst had an extra reason to encourage – and play a small role in – Sarah Gavron’s film about the suffragettesFri Oct 02 2015 - 05:30
99 Homes review: homes upon the scrapheapA malevolent housing repo man takes on a partner in this odd but effective – and very timely – morality taleThu Oct 01 2015 - 21:00
Donald Clarke: The words ‘gone viral’ don’t begin to cover Cameron’s #piggateWho cares if dubious reports of youthful debauchery don’t constitute serious news?Sat Sept 26 2015 - 01:00
Life review: a very professional piece of work, but it’s terribly hard to loveAnton Corbijn’s latest is gorgeous, cool and infuriatingly insubstantialFri Sept 25 2015 - 07:00
John Turturro: always an actor of characterThis most gounded of movie stars plays an egomaniacal American star tormenting his Italian director in Nanni Moretti’s latest. Just don’t ask Turturro to say who he based his ugly American onFri Sept 25 2015 - 06:00
Miss You Already review: Sickly sweet at times, but still a brave effortIt’s an odd mixture of genres, but Catherine Hardwicke’s story of friendship and illness has some good momentsThu Sept 24 2015 - 17:30
Older than Ireland review: the secrets of our centenariansIreland’s oldest residents fill the screen with warmth and wisdom in Alex Fegan’s thoughtful new documentaryThu Sept 24 2015 - 16:00
Room wins People’s Choice Award at Toronto Film FestivalLenny Abrahamson’s adaptation wins prize that usually predicts Oscars successSun Sept 20 2015 - 20:14
Donald Clarke: Corbyn is right, God Save the Queen is awfulNational anthems present a considerable challenge to even the most committed patriotSat Sept 19 2015 - 01:00
A Walk in the Woods review: Comedy is not fit for purposeRobert Redford’s latest project will stretch the credibility of viewersFri Sept 18 2015 - 08:52
Older Than Ireland: The secrets of centenariansPeople who were alive in 1916 opened up to film-maker Alex Fegan, but their own life stories were the most fascinatingFri Sept 18 2015 - 06:00
Pursuit review: firing up the Fenian CyclePaul Mercier’s Irish gangster thriller is so well made that it doesn’t need to dish on the pointlessly slavish mythologyThu Sept 17 2015 - 22:00
Everest review: Why see it? Because it’s thereA true disaster on the world’s most dangerous mountain is given a spectacular if slightly rote treatmentThu Sept 17 2015 - 17:00
The D Train review: Jack Black stumbles with style from triumph to embarrassing disasterSolid performances and a few risky twists and turns raise this comedy over the barThu Sept 17 2015 - 12:12
The cause too bonkers for even Donald Trump to supportKim Davis generated headlines by refusing to issue marriage licences to same-sex couplesSat Sept 12 2015 - 01:00
Irrational Man review: Irrational working practicesWoody Allen is back and asking a game Emma Stone to fall for an older manFri Sept 11 2015 - 00:00
The Visit review: M Night Shyamalan gets back on ghost trainSixth Sense’ director returns to form with American Gothic horror that packs trademark twistFri Sept 11 2015 - 00:00
Emily Browning: Legend star on her new roleActress Emily Browning on her role in new film ‘Legend’, about the Kray TwinsFri Sept 11 2015 - 00:00
Pasolini review: A celebration of high-brow hipster chicSoaked in sepulchral shades by Stefano Falivene, this film allows Dafoe to simmer intelligently in smart carsFri Sept 11 2015 - 00:00
The Callback Queen Review: a witless cacophony filled with bum notesMany of the gags in this ”romantic comedy” would likely be offensive if they weren’t so plain weirdThu Sept 10 2015 - 17:22
Owen Wilson: He’s charming. He’s relaxed. And he talks . . . real . . . slowThe ‘No Escape’ star can come across as a stereotypical Texan. But with a career that spans both indie favourites and Hollywood blockbusters, this actor has always had more than one string to his bowSat Sept 05 2015 - 07:00
Donald Clarke: Pity the rich and their wealth of first-world problems‘I’m betting people like me are immune to this class of wealth-generated depression’Sat Sept 05 2015 - 01:00
No Escape review: the least likely action cast of all timeWilson! Bell! Brosnan! Some unlikely action heroes handle the politically incorrect absurdities of this suspenseful thriller rather wellThu Sept 03 2015 - 23:00
The Transporter Refuelled review: a criminally appalling rebootA hard sell in every way, including the vodka in every second sceneThu Sept 03 2015 - 22:00
Me and Earl and the Dying Girl review: a teenagers’ guide to deathThis seductive, wholly original drama may overplay its characters’ quirks, but its emotional honesty is as refreshing as it is uncommonThu Sept 03 2015 - 18:00
Closed Curtain review: a forbidding narrative exercise from the pioneer of Iranian new waveThe film intersperses moment of great humour and power with indulgent follies that will strain the patience of all but the most resilient viewersThu Sept 03 2015 - 17:00
Donald Clarke: One man and his cat – the purrfect coupleOne individual actually titled her blog: ‘I Don’t Like Men Who Own Cats’Fri Aug 28 2015 - 22:06
Ed Skrein: Hoodlum, swimming coach, rapper, artist and movie starEd Skrein, who takes over from hardman Jason Statham in the Transporter franchise, explains his unusual career pathFri Aug 28 2015 - 05:00
Hitman Agent 47 review: fires and missesA film is dealing in faint praise when its location manager is singled for commendationThu Aug 27 2015 - 21:00
An Klondike review: Improbable film of the month – in a good wayComparisons with the late lamented ‘Deadwood’ are unavoidable in Dathaí Keane’s new featureThu Aug 27 2015 - 19:00
We Are Your Friends review: Boogie Nights with big beatsWe Are Your Friends resembles nothing so much as one of Hollywood’s efforts to address surf culture 40 years agoThu Aug 27 2015 - 18:00
Straight Outta Compton review: a pulsating if somewhat airbrushed biopicIce Cube has produced a celebratory account of his influential 1980s rap group NWA. The result is pulsating if somewhat airbrushed biopicThu Aug 27 2015 - 16:00
The Wolfpack review: a militantly odd hymn to the resilience of the human spiritThis documentary shows how the seven Angulo siblings, contained for years in a New York apartment, developed their own strange microcultureSat Aug 22 2015 - 11:58
Donald Clarke: A sentimental journey to ‘The West Wing’Aaron Sorkin’s series is implausible, corny and irony-free . . . and yet I’m still watchingSat Aug 22 2015 - 01:00
Zac Efron is a slave to the music in Max Joseph’s feature debutThe director of ‘We Are Your Friends’ tells how a small story about dance music became a big filmFri Aug 21 2015 - 06:00
Vacation review: Holliers – the next generationThe family are terrific in this ‘remake, sequel and reboot’ of a classic comedyThu Aug 20 2015 - 18:00
Sinister 2 review: eerie, supernatural and boringIrish director Ciarán Foy does his best with the atmospherics, but can do little with Sinister 2’s cluttered, tonally deranged mess of a scriptThu Aug 20 2015 - 17:28
Paper Towns review: Not just another teen movieA very effective teen entertainment that feels more honest and less contrived than Fault in Our StarsSun Aug 16 2015 - 13:00
Donald Clarke: Time to abolish ‘political correctness’Jerry Seinfeld and Chris Rock no longer to play colleges as students just too sensitiveSat Aug 15 2015 - 01:00
Mistress America review: queen of the Big AppleGreta Gerwig and Noah Baumbach reteam for another New York-set dramedy, a compact marvel that will repay repeated viewingsFri Aug 14 2015 - 06:00
Henry Cavill goes undercover in The Man from U.N.C.L.EWhen not saving the universe, the British actor likes a quiet pint down his local pubFri Aug 14 2015 - 06:00
Trainwreck review: Amy Schumer stays on the railsThe proto-femi-satirist teams up with monogamy-mad Judd Apatow for an amusing if overlong and weirdly reactionary romcomThu Aug 13 2015 - 14:18
Donald Clarke: Why Jeremy Corbyn could win the Labour leadership battle‘Peter Mandelson would never have let that happen’Sat Aug 08 2015 - 01:00
Tadhg O’Sullivan on Europe's border crisis: 'This has been going on for a long time''There was Calais. Then there was also what’s happening to democracy in Greece. There were a few days when I thought the film might become irrelevant.'Fri Aug 07 2015 - 06:00
Max review: a canine ‘American Sniper’The most brutally violent family film put before audiences since The Ten CommandmentsThu Aug 06 2015 - 20:00
The Diary of a Teenage Girl review: sex and the singular girlMarielle Heller’s 1970s drama, based on a popular graphic novel, is a gutsy film that engages with its period and tells a few truths for the agesThu Aug 06 2015 - 18:00