Reborn review - horror on the Hollywood skids

★★★ REBORN No scares but decent ideas down in the B-movie basement

No scares but decent ideas down in the B-movie basement

The Frankenstein-style, electrical storm-sparked resurrection of a dead baby in a hospital morgue, and her theft by its creepy attendant, is followed by a homage to Stephen King’s supernaturally potent teenagers, from Carrie to Firestarter, in a threadbare horror with consistent, curious ideas about its own B-movie realm.

Hollywood, Netflix review - rosy escapism serving good causes

★★★★ HOLLYWOOD, NETFLIX Rosy escapism serving good causes

A top ensemble makes this slick fantasy rewriting of Tinseltown history very easy to watch

If you're catering for wish fulfilment, you might as well go the whole hog. Some say that Ryan Murphy and Ian Brennan, in their latest peachy extravaganza, aim no higher than the cheesier fantasies of the late 1940s Hollywood they take into neverland. But there are two key aspects to consider, beyond the always tasteful cinematography, the fashions and the ever-present pastichey music.

Blu-ray: Fuller at Fox

Pulp movies with class

This new Eureka! boxset of 4K and 2K restorations provides ample evidence as to why Samuel Fuller was venerated by such a wide range of film-makers, including Godard, Wenders, Scorsese and Tarantino. 

Dark Money, BBC One review - powerful idea poorly executed

★★ DARK MONEY, BBC ONE Story of Hollywood child abuse fails to launch

Story of Hollywood child abuse fails to launch

It’s a topical idea, at least. Isaac Mensah, a child actor from a working-class family in London, has been cast in a Hollywood sci-fi blockbuster, and when he returns home his family and friends are agog to find out what his amazing movie experience was like. But the sky falls in when Isaac (Max Fincham) plays his parents a video he shot on his phone, containing evidence that he was abused by the film’s all-powerful producer, Jotham Starr, the boss of Yonder Starr Productions.

Bitter Wheat, Garrick Theatre review - Malkovich monologue is more chaff than wheat

★ BITTER WHEAT, GARRICK THEATRE Malkovich monologue is more chaff than wheat

The most controversial play of the year is shaping up to be the worst

John Malkovich is back in town - and he's starring in the most controversial play of the year. Trouble is, it might well also be the worst. When the subject of veteran American playwright David Mamet's new drama was announced as being about a Hollywood mogul, who, like Harvey Weinstein, is accused of abusive behaviour there was a predictable outcry. How dare Mamet write about this?

Destination Wedding review - a misanthropic modern-day romance

★ DESTINATION WEDDING Keanu Reeves, Winona Ryder in a misanthropic modern-day romance

Keanu Reeves and Winona Ryder reunite in the sunny climes of Southern California

Recently, Keanu Reeves and Winona Ryder have found themselves in a career renaissance. Reeves has made a remarkable comeback as the dog-loving action-hero John Wick, while Ryder won audiences over as the grief-stricken mother, Joyce Byers, in Netflix’s 80s nostalgia-fest Stranger Things.

The Life I Lead, Park Theatre review - pleasant enough but lacks bite

Solo play looks back blandly at the celebrated screen dad in 'Mary Poppins'

I am deeply jealous of Miles Jupp's dressing gown in The Life I Lead, the solo play at the Park Theatre. It's a silky-grey patterned number of exquisitely comfortable proportions, and just the sort of thing a chap should wear to tell the story of his life via some genial patter over an hour or two.

A Previn treasury

AN ANDRE PREVIN TREASURY Selected recordings of the great musician

Selected recordings of the great musician, who has died just short of his 90th birthday

In a way, he was a second Bernstein.