Surprised by Oxford review - wishy-washy romance ticks the sightseeing boxes

★★ SURPRISED BY OXFORD Wishy-washy romance ticks the sightseeing boxes

Ryan Whitaker's film of Carolyn Weber's memoir of Christian conversion pulls its religious punches

The misty streets and lofty spires of Oxford star in this adaptation of Carolyn Weber’s 2011 memoir, Surprised by Oxford, in which she finds God while studying for an MPhil in English literature.

Strange Way of Life review - Pedro Almodóvar's queer Western

★★★ STRANGE WAY OF LIFE Pedro Almodóvar's queer Western

A sheriff and his old lover spark again in a thin frontier drama

Less is more, except when it isn’t. Among the latest batch of overlong Oscar-tipped movies by celebrated auteurs such as Christopher Nolan (Oppenheimer with a running time of 181 minutes) and Martin Scorsese (Killers of the Flower Moon, 207 mins), it’s a relief to find the iconic Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar bucking the trend with a 31-minute short that doesn’t test the audience’s mental and physical stamina.

Blu-ray: Gregory's Girl

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: GREGORY'S GIRL Bill Forsyth's peerless romantic comedy returns

Bill Forsyth's peerless romantic comedy returns

Gregory’s Girl stands alongside Kes as one of the few films offering a realistic depiction of state school life. Director Bill Forsyth’s surreal flourishes delight without getting in the way: think of the penguin waddling along the corridors, or the young lad glimpsed smoking a pipe in the boys’ toilets.

The Nettle Dress review - a moving story exquisitely told

A widower weaves his way out of grief

Lasting just over an hour, The Nettle Dress is like a fairy story. It builds very slowly, each beautifully framed shot contributing toward a perfect little gem that tells a moral tale.

A man spends seven years coming to terms with the loss of both his father and his wife from cancer by spinning nettle fibres into threads, then weaving them into a length of cloth. He recalls sitting beside a hospital bed, spinning while listening to his father’s breathing dwindle to a last gentle sigh, then during his wife’s final illness, spinning his way through sorrow.

Expend4bles review - last ride for the over-the-hill gang?

Sly Stallone's veterans franchise has seen better days

Thanks to numerous arguments and disagreements over script, casting etc, nine years have elapsed since Expendables 3 hit the multiplexes, and Sylvester Stallone and his mercenary crew were perilously close to being over the hill even then. In Expend4bles, age has duly withered them even further, a fact wryly acknowledged by director Scott Waugh and his screenwriting squad.

R.M.N. review - ethnic cleansing in rural Romania

★★★★ RMN Cristian Mungiu's tale from Transylvania has bite but may not be his best

Cristian Mungiu's tale from Transylvania has bite but may not be his best

If you think we’ve got culture wars, then welcome to Transylvania. This rugged Romanian region is home to a bewildering overlap of ethnicities and tongues – Hungarian, a bit of German and Romanian itself – such that Cristian Mungiu’s new movie offers subtitles in different colours to get the idea across.

A Year in a Field review - exemplary eco-doc

Filmmaker Christopher Morris keeps vigil near Land's End as the planet goes to hell

A shot of a dead field mouse sets the tone for this sobering “slow cinema” documentary, narrator-director Christopher Morris’s response, simultaneously aghast and philosophical, to the looming environmental catastrophe.

Side By Side Ukrainian Film Festival, Curzon Soho - cameras of courage and resistance

SIDE BY SIDE UKRAINIAN FILM FESTIVAL, CURZON SOHO Cameras of courage and resistance

The festival shows war-torn Ukraine in turmoil but unbowed

François Truffaut said that there is no such thing as an anti-war film because cinema inevitably glorifies the horror of conflict. The premise was robustly challenged over the weekend at the Ukrainian Institute London’s fourth annual film festival, Side By Side, which screened a handful of films, documentary and narrative, feature-length and short, that compelled the audience to reflect deeply on war’s horrific nature.

A Haunting in Venice review - a case of Poirot by numbers

★★★ A HAUNTING IN VENICE Branagh and his cast have fun, but not enough narrative impact

Kenneth Branagh and his cast have fun, but not enough narrative impact

You can imagine the thought processes that brought Kenneth Branagh’s latest adventure as Poirot, his third, to the big screen.

Blu-Ray: Partie de Campagne

★★★★ BLU-RAY: PARTIE DE CAMPAGNE Unfinished gem from French master of cinema

Unfinished gem from French master of cinema

Partie de Campagne (1946), while not being one of French cinema giant Jean Renoir’s best-known films, unfinished and just under 40 minutes long, is still regarded as an important if not essential example of the director’s multi-faceted and often innovative work.