Neil Young: Harvest Time review - a thrillingly intimate fly-on-the-wall documentary

★★★★ NEIL YOUNG: HARVEST TIME A thrillingly intimate fly-on-the-wall documentary

Warm, celebratory, charming, and fun - was the making of Neil Young's 'Harvest' the making of the singer?

“You’re filmin’ a movie or something – can you explain this?” the radio DJ turns to Neil Young, a laugh underpinning his question and setting the scene: light, jovial.

“We’re just makin’ a film about…” Young pauses for a second. “I dunno, just the things we wanna film… I’m making it like I make an album, sort of… It’s like… I’m cutting it, instead of… so it’s personal, like an album.”

“So some day someone’ll be able to go to a theatre and see it maybe?” the DJ asks.

“Yeah, I hope so, maybe pretty soon,” comes the reply. 

Matilda the Musical review - a dizzying, smartly subversive delight

★★★★★ MATILDA THE MUSICAL Matthew Warchus's glorious stage show sparkles anew onscreen

Matthew Warchus's glorious stage show sparkles anew onscreen

I bow to no one in my affection for Matilda the Musical onstage, which I've loved across multiple iterations, from Stratford-upon-Avon to the West End and Broadway, and numerous cast changes, too.

Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery review - grand, class-conscious escapism

★★★★ GLASS ONION: A KNIVES OUT MYSTERY Grand, class-conscious escapism

Daniel Craig’s detective Benoit Blanc returns for more fizzing, elite-skewering fun

Rian Johnson’s Knives Out sequel is an even more brightly entertaining puzzle picture, revelling in the old-fashioned glamour of enviably sunny climes and another rogues’ gallery of piquantly deployed film stars. Self-styled world’s greatest detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) is again on hand to pick up the inevitably murderous pieces.

Bones and All review - eat, don't heat

'Call Me By Your Name' star and director reunite to unsavoury effect

You expect gross-out movies to send your hands flying in front of your eyes. But Luca Guadagnino's ludicrous Bones and All is not just gory but grossly sentimental, too. Reuniting the Italian director with the star of his breakout hit Call Me By Your Name, the film finds a physical embodiment of its title in the wraithlike Timothée Chalamet, playing a cannibal-minded drifter who beneath his skin and bones is just a lost soul at heart. 

Nanny review - no spoonfuls of sugar in this spooky tale

★★★ NANNY Intriguing and ambitious psychological drama addresses race and class

Intriguing and ambitious psychological drama addresses race and class

Nanny is being marketed as a horror movie, and arachnophobes should certainly beware, but it’s also a stylish exploration of race and class by African-American writer-director Nikyatu Jusu.

Its heroine is Aisha (Anna Diop) a Senegalese graduate teacher who is fluent in several languages. Without official papers, however, she can only work as a nanny in New York. Amy (Michelle Monaghan) is pursuing her own career and pays Aisha cash in hand to teach French to her five-year-old daughter Rose.  

She Said review - a necessary newsroom thriller

★★★★ SHE SAID A necessary newsroom thriller

Galvanising account of how reporters Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey toppled Harvey Weinstein

Five years have elapsed since New York Times reporters Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey revealed that dozens of women had accused the movie mogul Harvey Weinstein of sexual abuse and harassment over three decades. Based on Kantor and Twohey’s book about their investigation, which sparked the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements, She Said is an urgent if belated film.

Utama review - incandescent portrait of a dying way of life in Bolivia

Anthropological film-making meets luscious imagery in this moving drama

Utama won the World Dramatic Prize at Sundance this year and is tipped for an Oscar nomination, too. The film is set in a remote region in Bolivia’s arid highlands. Its gentle pace and non-professional actors give it a documentary feel but there is real narrative skill deployed. 

Blu-ray: Dragon's Return

★★★★ BLU-RAY: DRAGON'S RETURN Taut Slovak fable about prejudice, superstition, mob rule

Taut Slovak fable about prejudice, superstition and mob rule

Slovak director Eduard Grečner wrote the first draft of a screenplay for Dragon’s Return (Drak sa vracia) in 1956 but didn’t have the confidence to direct it, this adaptation of a novella by the Slovak author Dobroslav Chrobák that he finally realised 12 years later.

Armageddon Time review - James Gray goes back to skool

★★★★ ARMAGEDDON TIME James Gray's wistful memoir of his New York City boyhood

The director's wistful memoir of his New York City boyhood

Was it lockdown that did it? Forcing filmmakers to sit at home, contemplate their lives, and conclude that just as soon as the masks came off, it was time to shine a light on their youth?

Since Covid struck, we’ve seen Kenneth Branagh’s growing-up-in-the-Troubles memoir Belfast, Richard Linklater’s nostalgic animation Apollo 10 1/2 : A Space Age Childhood, and The Souvenir Part II, in which Joanna Hogg mines her film student days yet again.