Review: Hotel Mumbai @ Manchester Film Festival 2019 launch night
Dealing with real life terrorist attacks in film is a bit of a grey area. On the one hand, widespread media coverage is exactly what these terrorists want.
Dealing with real life terrorist attacks in film is a bit of a grey area. On the one hand, widespread media coverage is exactly what these terrorists want.
Fear. Fear of God. Fear of money. Fear of the police. Fear of the future. Fear of the past.
Christian Bale stars as Dick Cheney in this look at the Bush administration.
MM sit down for the premiere of Manchester director Jack Levy’s latest release – a deliciously dark and droll claustrophobic thriller.
Stutterer is a beautiful romance that sheds the clichéd tropes of the genre to produce something poignant, wonderful and genuine.
We Can’t Live Without Cosmos bears both the warm comfort of the Saturday morning cartoons of youth and the wonder and depth of the cosmos themselves.
Love Me Tinder is a melancholy tale of love and loneliness in a time when traditional routes to love are breaking down and solitude is accepted as the norm by many.
Far too much of the weak script is devoted to Dallas (McConaughey), explaining away his absence and not really covering the huge hole he left behind.
MM review The Imitation Game, a look into the life of world-renowned mathematician Alan Turing, starring Benedict Cumberbatch, Keira Knightley and Charles Dance
Gary Hook (Jack O’Connell), is a young British recruit with a patriot’s heart. He lands as part of an emergency crew assigned to keeping the peace in the heart of the fighting.
The film itself is a rhetorical question; how much can you ever really know about your other half? The answer offered: next to nothing. If you’re lucky.
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