More Than One Story review - nine helpings of provocative political theatre

★★★★ MORE THAN ONE STORY Nine helpings of provocative political theatre

Cardboard Citizens shine an unforgiving light on poverty in the UK

A stark end-title at the end of this collection of short films sums up the dire situation the UK is in: one in five people,14 million Britons, are now living in poverty. 

Longlegs review - like its titular killer, this summer's most hyped horror film leaves no trace

★★★ LONGLEGS Like its titular killer, this summer's most hyped horror film leaves no trace

A white-knuckle experience, but not much more, despite Nicolas Cage on familiar form

Apparently when actress Maika Monroe first saw Nicolas Cage in his full Longlegs get-up, her heart-rate skyrocketed to 170 bpm (her resting heart rate is 76). Or at least so a promotional video tells us.

Sleep review - things that go bump in the night

★★★ SLEEP Weird nocturnal phenomena threaten couple's marital bliss

Weird nocturnal phenomena threaten couple's marital bliss

The question Korean director Jason Yu is asking in this eerie little spine-tingler (his debut feature) is “how well do you know your partner?” He may also be inquiring whether or not you believe in life after death, while planting nagging seeds of doubt about the competence of the medical profession.

Fly Me to the Moon review - NASA gets a Madison Avenue makeover

★★★★ FLY ME TO THE MOON How politics and propaganda drove America's race into space

How politics and propaganda drove America's race into space

It’s over 50 years since men last landed on our orbiting space-neighbour, but director Greg Berlanti's Fly Me to the Moon transports us back to the feverish days in 1969 when Apollo 11 was about to tackle the feat for the first time. The film’s promo material rather misleadingly bills it as “a sparkling rom-com”, but it has a few other strings to its bow.

MaXXXine review - a bloody star is born

★★★★ MAXXXINE Mia Goth's horror final girl goes to 80s Hollywood in Ti West's trashy, sly sequel

Mia Goth's horror final girl goes to Eighties Hollywood in Ti West's trashy, sly sequel

Mia Goth’s mighty Maxine finally makes it to Hollywood in Ti West’s brash conclusion to the trilogy he began with X (2022), which has become a visceral treatise on film’s 20th century allure, and the bloody downside of dreaming to escape.

Blu-ray: Merry-Go-Round (Körhinta)

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: MERRY-GO-ROUND Iconic, multi-layered Hungarian love story returns

Iconic, multi-layered Hungarian love story returns

There’s a lot to unpick in Zoltán Fabri’s 1956 film Merry-Go-Round (Körhinta). Take leading man Imre Soós’s disarming resemblance to a young Peter O’Toole, and a central love story which plays out like a Hungarian take on Romeo and Juliet with some post-war agrarian politics thrown in for good measure.

Heart of an Oak review - an adventure film starring a tree and its inhabitants

★★★★ HEART OF AN OAK An adventure film starring a tree and its inhabitants

Superb footage adulterated with visual effects

On one level, Heart of an Oak is the most spectacular nature film you are ever likely to see. The camera glides over a forest before honing in on a magnificent, 210 year old oak tree. It travels up the gnarled surface of the ancient trunk, which resembles elephant hide, into the canopy. Time to introduce the cast of what directors Laurent Charbonnier and Michel Sedoux describe as an “adventure movie”: weevils, a red squirrel, woodpecker, robin and pair of jays, field mice and some wild boar. All of them live in or around the tree and this is their story.

DVD/Blu-Ray: Back to Black

★★★ DVD/BLU-RAY: BACK TO BLACK Sam Taylor-Johnson's enjoyable but soft-focused take on the Amy Winehouse story

Sam Taylor-Johnson's enjoyable but soft-focused take on the Amy Winehouse story

Sam Taylor-Johnson’s biopic Back to Black, written by Matt Greenhalgh and starring Marisa Abela (Industry) as Amy Winehouse, has been criticised for its soft-focused approach.

And its sympathetic portrayals of Blake Fielder-Civil (a punchy Jack O’Connell) and Amy’s dad Mitch (Eddie Marsan) are very different from those in Asif Kapadia’s damning 2015 documentary Amy. The possibility of the famously protective Mitch having any editorial control is denied by Taylor-Johnson, but one wonders.

I Am: Celine Dion, Prime Video review - inside the superstar singer's living hell

★★★★★ I AM: CELINE DION, PRIME VIDEO Inside the superstar singer's living hell

Shattering documentary makes agonising viewing

It was 20 years ago that Celine Dion first experienced the muscle spasming which would eventually be diagnosed as Stiff Person Syndrome (SPS). She suddenly found she couldn’t control the pitch of her voice, a calamitous occurrence for a singer renowned for the almost superhuman power and accuracy of her vocal control. The condition advanced surreptitiously over the succeeding years, and when Dion had to pull out of her residency in Las Vegas in 2021 it became clear that the problem was acute.