Four new films to see this week

Lord of the Rings anime prequel is violent fun for fans, but Luca Guadagnino’s Queer is a vacuous disappointment. Plus documentaries The Bibi Files and Chasing the Light

Héra (voiced by Gaia Wise) in The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim. Photograph: Warner Bros Entertainment Inc
Héra (voiced by Gaia Wise) in The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim. Photograph: Warner Bros Entertainment Inc

The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim ★★★☆☆

Directed by Kenji Kamiyama. Voices of Brian Cox, Gaia Wise, Luke Pasqualino, Miranda Otto. PG cert, gen release, 134 min

Busy, attractive anime telling of Middle-earth from just before The Lord of the Rings kicks off. Helm Hammerhand (Cox in full voice), king of Rohan, goes to war with rivals and ends up drawing plucky daughter Héra (Wise) into the conflict. Rich in Tolkien’s melange of Scandinavia and Anglo-Saxony, the piece is also at home to brutal anime-compliant surrealism, such as when a fanged freshwater octopus chews up an unfortunate elephant. Anybody half on board should have a decent time. It is certainly a heck of a lot better than the over-extended Hobbit trilogy. Full review DC

Queer ★★☆☆☆

Drew Starkey and Daniel Craig in Queer. Photograph: The Apartment SRL/FremantleMedia North America, Inc/Frenesy Film Company SRL/Yannis Drakoulidis
Drew Starkey and Daniel Craig in Queer. Photograph: The Apartment SRL/FremantleMedia North America, Inc/Frenesy Film Company SRL/Yannis Drakoulidis

Directed by Luca Guadagnino. Starring Daniel Craig, Drew Starkey, Jason Schwartzman, Henrique Zaga, Lesley Manville. 16 cert, gen release, 138 min

An American writer takes drugs and falls in love in postwar Mexico. Guadagnino’s hugely disappointing adaptation of William S Burroughs’s posthumously published novella opens with Sinéad O’Connor’s cover of Nirvana’s All Apologies and randomised objects from that author’s Mexico City apartment. “Everyone is gay,” get it? The misused music and hollow visuals set the tone for a vacuous work that frequently feels like an over-styled catalogue shoot. One half expects price tags to appear on Vintage Typewriter and Distressed Whiskey Bottle. Full review TB

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The Bibi Files ★★★★☆

Binyamin Netanyahu in the documentary The Bibi Files. Photograph: Ziv Koren
Binyamin Netanyahu in the documentary The Bibi Files. Photograph: Ziv Koren

Directed by Alexis Bloom. Featuring Ami Ayalon, Raviv Drucker, Nir Hefetz, Binyamin Netanyahu, Sara Netanyahu, Yair Netanyahu. Digital platforms, 113 min

Scathing documentary portrait of Binyamin Netanyahu’s long, ignoble history of receiving backhanders. Extensive footage of the police interrogations, running into thousands of hours, was leaked to the Oscar-winning documentarian Alex Gibney (who produced The Bibi Files) last year. These tapes are supplemented and contextualised by such talking heads as former prime minister Ehud Olmert and former Shin Bet head Ami Ayalon. A swaggering, unapologetic appearance by Yair Netanyahu, the premier’s son and presumed successor, signals a continuation of the family’s murky legacy. Full review TB

Chasing the Light ★★★☆☆

Peter Cornish in the documentary Chasing the Light
Peter Cornish in the documentary Chasing the Light

Directed by Maurice O’Brien. Featuring Peter Cornish, Harriet Cornish. PG cert, limited release, 88 min

Agreeable documentary on how Peter Cornish set up a famous Buddhist retreat in west Cork. In truth, some viewers, particularly those who don’t acknowledge that much ballyhooed “spiritual dimension”, will find their attention wandering during the lengthy encomiums to the Rigpa school of Buddhism. As we are told that life is akin to a dream, thoughts turn to Dr Johnson kicking his large stone after exposure to Bishop Berkeley’s notion that matter does not exist. Others will find much to savour from the philosophy as well as grand shots of the Atlantic coast. Full review DC

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Donald Clarke

Donald Clarke

Donald Clarke, a contributor to The Irish Times, is Chief Film Correspondent and a regular columnist

Tara Brady

Tara Brady

Tara Brady, a contributor to The Irish Times, is a writer and film critic