La Syndicaliste review - a star outshines her conspiracy thriller script

★★★ LA SYNDICALISTE A star outshines her conspiracy thriller script

Isabelle Huppert's real-person role doesn't match her star wattage

On the face of it, La Syndicaliste (aka The Sitting Duck) is a conspiracy thriller that runs along familiar tracks: clever woman begins to suspect dirty dealings at a very high level in the high-stakes industry she works for and lands herself in a dangerous mess. There are anonymous phonecalls, menacingly bright headlights behind her… Think Silkwood in stilettos.

Hello, Bookstore review - a documentary with shelf life

★★★★★ HELLO, BOOKSTORE A documentary with shelf life

How to turn a book shop into an oasis of wellbeing

It’s impossible not to fall in love with Matthew Tannenbaum, the man at the centre of this delightful film. Reading books and chatting to people about books are two of his favourite occupations, so running a bookstore is his idea of paradise. His pleasure is so infectious that the independent bookstore he’s run in Lenox, Massachusetts for over 40 years has become a hub of bonhomie.

Blu-ray: Le Mépris (Contempt)

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: LE MEPRIS (CONTEMPT) Jean-Luc Godard's masterpiece of classic Hollywood

Jean-Luc Godard's masterpiece about the deaths of love and classic Hollywood

It’s an odalisque to arouse envy in Titian, Boucher, Ingres, or Manet.

Filtered amber, white, and blue lights successively bathe Brigitte Bardot, crowned by that golden cloud, as she asks Michel Piccoli, her co-star and screen husband in Jean-Luc Godard’s Le Mépris (1963, Contempt), to evaluate her naked body’s flawless components while she inventories them post-coitally – feet, ankles, knees, thighs, behind, breasts, nipples, shoulders, arms, face, mouth, eyes, nose, ears.

The Super 8 Years review - Nobel laureate’s meditative self-portrait from home movies

★★★★ THE SUPER 8 YEARS Nobel laureate’s meditative self-portrait from home movies

French novelist Annie Ernaux fashions a new kind of auto-fiction

The French auto-fiction writer Annie Ernaux, now 82, was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature last year; now a fascinating new facet of her creative life has been released via her home movies.

Asteroid City review - desert dreams

★★★ ASTEROID CITY Scarlett Johansson leads Wes Anderson's latest

Scarlett Johansson leads Wes Anderson's latest, a Fifties-set mixture of fetish and feeling

Multi-media meta-layers land fast in Wes Anderson’s 11th film, overriding reality. Here’s Bryan Cranston’s portentous Fifties TV host (pictured below) in black-and-white, boxed Academy ratio, documenting rehearsals for a televised play, whose fictive reality then becomes a widescreen colour train hurtling through the desert. The latter scene's exhilarating cinema still sweeps you up.

Blu-ray: I Am Weekender

New doc on Flowered Up's rave epic Weekender, plus its sensual, sensitive, scene-defining video

Pinned eyes stare from a frozen husk of a face as a clubber comes down, cradled high over London on a window-cleaner’s perch. Director WIZ’s 18-minute video for Flowered Up’s rave epic “Weekender” (1992) takes you on the E’d up odyssey of Little Joe (Lee Whitlock), from skinning up at work through clubland peaks to chilly aftermath.

Pretty Red Dress review - not so sparkly British black film

★★ PRETTY RED DRESS Not so sparkly British black film

Alexandra Burke starring debut tackles sexuality and conformity in South London

Pretty Red Dress opens with a classic Motown-esque girl group belting out a show tune before cutting to Travis (Natey Jones) as he leaves prison. Waiting for him outside is Candice (Alexandra Burke); she’s sitting in her Audi, singing along to the radio.

At home is their teenage daughter, Kenisha (Temilola Olatunbosun), happy enough to have her dad back in their Lambeth flat on a council estate, but facing her own problems at school with both authority and friends.