Isabelle Huppert and director Jean-Paul Salomé: 'Cinema is about a little trade, a little business'

La Syndicaliste's star and director discuss misogyny, ambiguity and the quest for perfection

Isabelle Huppert is French cinema’s icon of icy transgression, from Bertrand Blier’s outrageous Les Valseuses (1974) to Paul Verhhoeven’s Elle (2017), in which her character Michéle denies rape’s trauma, instead seeking out her rapist for sadomasochistic sex and mind-games. Huppert was Oscar-nominated for the latter, though she was ultimately too much for Hollywood.

Blu-ray: Inland Empire

David Lynch's surreal horror wotsit, newly restored and eternally brain-frazzling

Searching for a coherent narrative thread in David Lynch’s Inland Empire (2006) is probably futile, so it’s best to begin with the movie’s nervy central performance by Laura Dern in multiple, overlapping roles as “a woman in trouble” – the movie’s subtitle. Or maybe many different women in all manner of trouble. 

The Damned Don't Cry review - a Moroccan mother and son on the margins

★★★★ THE DAMNED DON'T CRY A Moroccan mother and son on the margins

Fyzal Boulifa's impressive second feature explores class, shame and identity

British-Moroccan director Fyzal Boulifa’s second feature is a departure from his first, the brilliant and disturbing Lynn + Lucy of 2020. That was set on an Essex housing estate; this one takes place in Morocco.

Shabu review - documentary-drama about youngsters in Rotterdam

★★ SHABU Documentary-drama about youngsters in Rotterdam

A memorable youth character and a glimpse into life on a Dutch housing estate

This loose-limbed movie follows Shabu, a 14-year-old boy who is growing up on the public housing estate known as the Peperklip (Paperclip) in Rotterdam. It’s the summer holidays and he’d like to hang out with his girlfriend and his mates, but first he’s got to sort out some trouble. 

Shabu’s beloved grandma flew home to see her family in Suriname, and the lad took her car for a joyride and trashed it. Now he has to work out how to make enough money so his grandma can replace her car when she gets back.

Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One review - buckle up

★★★★★ MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE - DEAD RECKONING PART ONE Buckle up!

Tom Cruise and team offer another exhilarating mix of spy spoofery, intrigue and action

After 27 years and half a dozen instalments of a franchise predicated on its ability to up the ante on itself to ever more dizzying heights of ingenious, character-driven, genuinely heart-in-mouth action, the killjoy or cynic may well be lining up an alternative title for the latest: Mission: Impossible – Anti-climax. But they would never get to use it. Not a chance. 

DVD/Blu-ray: Western Approaches

Masterful 1944 story doc captures courage and cooperation of Britain's merchant seamen

Writer-director Pat Jackson’s Western Approaches (1944), a Technicolor tour de force partly shot in turbulent seas by Jack Cardiff, is a stirring World War II story documentary that demonstrates the bravery, resilience, selflessness, and collective spirit of men of the British Merchant Navy during the Battle of the Atlantic. 

Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny review - a baggy, finally poignant finale

★★★ INDIANA JONES AND THE DIAL OF DESTINY A baggy, finally poignant finale

Harrison Ford's charismatic commitment beats dull action and turgid pace

Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) revived Thirties adventure serials’ simple thrills, a George Lucas notion adrenalised by Spielberg. Its hero Indy Jones wasn’t built for depth or pathos, and the struggle to find reasons for his return notoriously sank Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008), and left this final chapter in production purgatory till Harrison Ford was 79.

Mother and Son review - 20 years with an erratic ma

★★★ MOTHER AND SON Annabelle Lengronne shines as an African migrant in France

Annabelle Lengronne shines as an African migrant in France who perplexes her boys

In French, this film is called Un petit frère (“A little brother”), and for once it may be that a film’s English title is an improvement on the original. The fitful and fragmented second feature by Léonor Serraille is about a multi-tasking migrant from Ivory Coast and her two sons, whom we drop in on at intervals across 20 years or so, beginning in 1989.