And Then Come the Nightjars review - two farm friends

A pair of blokes bond amid a foot-and-mouth cattle cull down in deepest Devon

This modest British dramedy is billed as a “heart-warming story of friendship and survival set against the backdrop of the 2001 Foot and Mouth outbreak”. That’s perhaps not the first catastrophe we associate with that fateful year, but it was a grim event in its own way: a livestock epidemic that led to the culling of countless farm animals across Britain.

Cobweb review - family secrets, bad dreams

A Halloween-themed horror movie gets lost in the details while losing the thread

At first, eight-year-old Peter tries to wish away the strange midnight noises as bad dreams, but the persistent knocking against his attic bedroom wall keeps him awake. His querulous mother (Lizzy Caplan, pictured below), assures him that he’s got a “beautiful imagination”, and “that there are bound to be bumps in the night.”

Fool's Paradise review - unfunny stab at making fun of Hollywood

★ FOOL'S PARADISE Unfunny stab at making fun of Hollywood

Charlie Day's comedy is loaded with cameos but very low on laughs

It must have looked like a funny idea on paper: a mute innocent stumbles into a Hollywood career, is mindlessly fêted by the industry and throws all its idiocies into stark relief. It’s an idea as old as the romances of Chretien de Troyes and Voltaire’s Candide, and was given an earlier Hollywood outing in Being There. But the lack of originality of the basic premise isn’t the problem here. 

DVD/Blu-ray: Gothic

Ken Russell's febrile fantasy about the night Mary Shelley conceived 'Frankenstein'

Ken Russell’s horror comedy Gothic (1986) compresses into one nightmarish night the fabled three days in June 1816 when Lord Byron (Gabriel Byrne) entertained at his retreat Villa Diodati near Lake Geneva his fellow Romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley (Julian Sands), Shelley’s partner Mary Godwin (Natasha Richardson), and her half-sister Claire Clairmont (Miriam Cyr).

Mob Land review - familiar pulp fiction

★★★ MOB LAND Travolta graces a derivative but solid Southern noir

Travolta graces a derivative but solid Southern noir

Optimistically billed as John Travolta’s comeback, writer-director Nicholas Maggio’s debut is an effective Southern noir, with Travolta an authoritative but peripheral presence.

Scrapper review - home alone, but then Dad turns up

★★★★ SCRAPPER Charlotte Regan makes a promising debut with estranged family drama

Director Charlotte Regan makes a promising debut with this tale of a motherless girl and her estranged father

It’s the summer holidays, and though Georgie (Lola Campbell) is only 12, she’s managing to keep her council house looking just the way her mum liked it. There may be a few spiders hanging around but they have names and personalities and there’s food in the cupboard, even if it’s been paid for from the proceeds of selling the bikes Georgie has stolen.  

The Red Shoes: Next Step review - teen dancer's crisis

★★ THE RED SHOES: NEXT STEP An Australian teen ballet movie marred by its ludicrous plot

An Australian teen ballet movie marred by its ludicrous plot

Fans of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's timeless classic The Red Shoes shouldn’t rush to The Red Shoes: Next Step expecting a sequel. This sentimental Australian teen drama is more of a step-change than a follow-up.

The Innocent review - muddled French crime comedy

★★★ THE INNOCENT Tale of a caviar heist needs more than likable performances

Tale of a caviar heist needs more than likable performances

Thespians and thieves have often pooled their resources in movies, notably in the work of Woody Allen. Since acting is basically a form of lying, goes the joke, actors dine at the same Runyon-esque table as people who nick stuff, and this French comedy offers a new story of a crim who needs some muscle from the theatrical arts.

Blu-ray: Thieves Like Us

★★★★ BLU-RAY: THIEVES LIKE US Altman's elegy for the Great Depression

Altman's elegy for the Great Depression - a tale of hapless bank robbers set in the Deep South

Thieves Like Us, Robert Altman’s 1974 evocation of 1930s Mississippi, wasn’t a commercial hit on its original release, even though Pauline Kael called it a masterpiece.

Blue Beetle review - radical rehash

Threadbare DC super-heroics allow a loving, subversive look at Latino family life

Blue Beetle is DC’s first screen Latino superhero, a recent development in the history of a D-grade character summed up here in his own film as “like the Flash… or Superman… but not as good”. Scraping the character barrel and first meant for cable, his debut also resists the grim “adult” gravitas routinely borrowed from Alan Moore and Frank Miller’s Eighties comics, popping with bright colours and breezy, communal humanity.