Review: Christopher Robin
Even without coming on the heels of Goodbye Christopher Robin, which recounted the origins of the beloved Winnie the Pooh and his friends...
Review: Zoe
Love is a kind of faith and, as with most faiths, difficult to quantify. There is no one definitive formula for it, nor is there one to...
Review: Beauty and the Beast
Most remakes, adaptations and updates are superfluous by nature and Disney's $160 million live-action re-staging of its 1991 animated...
Review: T2 Trainspotting
It's been 21 years since Renton chose life (and stole his mates' money) at the end of Danny Boyle's generation-defining Trainspotting,...
Review: American Pastoral
Seymour "Swede" Levov would seem to have it all: he's a Greatest Generation Newark Jew with the blond, blue-eyed looks of a WASP, a...
Review: Last Days in the Desert
A man looks out at his surroundings. A parched landscape of craggy hills gazes back. He appears uncertain at times, resigned at others,...
Review: Miles Ahead
Miles Ahead, a biopic of jazz giant Miles Davis that's decidedly not straight and all chaser, comes at you in free-form fragments that...
Review: Our Kind of Traitor
Though perhaps not as complex an exploration of the moral morass in which John le Carré typically plunges his characters, Our Kind of...
Review: Jane Got a Gun
Promises are made to be broken, though love can make them seem everlasting. A pair of lovers, blinded by their splendour in the grass,...
Review: Mortdecai
Before being badly brought to life onscreen in the sometimes amusing Mortdecai, the character of Lord Charlie Mortdecai was the...