Michael Keaton gives a soaring performance as broken actor Riggan Thomson in the extraordinary Birdman, which has set a very high bar for cinema in 2015.
Jemma Rutter reviews the finale of The Hobbit Franchise.
“Ear-plugs are an absolute must,” read Ben Robins’ review of Annie, Will Geluck’s abysmal holiday remake.
Ben Robins talked to director James Marsh and script writer Antony McCarten about their next release The Theory of Everything, which follows Stephen Hawking’s life.
Read Naomi Lucking’s first look review of Foxcatcher, an unsettling tale of brotherhood and betrayal from multi-award-winning director Bennett Miller.
Ben Robins gives his first thoughts about James Marsh’s much anticipated The Theory of Everything.
It’s clear that Reitman is gunning for some sort of grand pervasive message about the status of human communication and feeling but ultimately he gives himself no room to clearly express it, says Ben Robins.
The Edge gets an exclusive first look at Disney’s latest musical fairytale output, Into the Woods starring James Corden, Anna Kendrick and Meryl Streep.
The Edge catches up with Anna Kendrick, James Corden, Rob Marshall and John Deluca of Disney’s Into the Woods in London.
For his second articles analysing Christmas in one shot, Harrison Abbott gets personal and talks about his love for the Gremlins.
If it wasn’t for the fact that they’d constitute spoilers, you could fill a whole review just listing the gloriously stupid moments that pad out this beautiful disaster, says Harrison Abbott.
Tom Hopkins reviews Horrible Bosses 2, the comedy sequel staring Jason Bateman, Jason Sudekis and Charlie Day.
The film has a strong sense of DIY throughout, which works both to its asset and disadvantage, says our Film Editor.
Bill Murray is superb, easing into his role with confidence and dominating the film with his presence says Matt Clarson.