William Kentridge, Royal Academy review - from art to theatre, and back again

★★★ WILLIAM KENTRIDGE, ROYAL ACADEMY From art to theatre, and back again

The past is hideous, the future an unknown entity in the varied forms of the artist's work

South African artist William Kentridge appears on video in his studio, twice. On the right he sits scribbling, waiting for an idea to surface. Meanwhile his alter ego stands impatiently by, trying to peek at his other half’s notes and, desperate for enlightenment, even reads a recipe out loud. The artist, it seems, doesn’t have a clue; he is as much in the dark as everyone else. A Lesson in Lethargy, 2010 offers a brief moment of humour in this relentlessly dark exhibition.

Lightyear review - can infinity be a yawn?

★ LIGHTYEAR Pixar's space adventure spin-off from 'Toy Story' series fails to launch

Pixar's space adventure spin-off from 'Toy Story' series fails to launch

The animation may be stunning, but in every other department, Lightyear is a disappointment. It’s a crying shame for anyone who loved the original Toy Story and its (mainly) excellent sequels. If you were expecting a buzz from Pixar’s origin story, brace yourself instead for a damp squib. 

Prehistoric Planet, Apple TV+ review - David Attenborough presents life on earth, 66 million years ago

★★★★ PREHISTORIC PLANET, APPLE TV+ David Attenborough presents life on earth, 66 million years ago: technology brings dinosaurs to life in microscopic detail

Technology brings dinosaurs to life in microscopic detail

With Jurassic World: Dominion due in June, which will mark the end of the “Jurassic” movie franchise, here’s Apple TV’s alternative, science-based history of dinosaurs and their world. It’s produced by Jon Favreau, a key player in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and narrated by David Attenborough in his trademark “Whispering Dave” style.

Flee review - award-winning documentary portrays the refugee experience

★★★★ FLEE Award-winning documentary portrays the refugee experience

An ingenious deployment of animation and archive

It’s good timing for the release of Flee in UK cinemas. The Danish movie has just made Oscar history by being nominated in three categories – Animated Feature, Documentary, and International Feature and is bound to win in at least one of them. 

DVD/Blu-ray: Belleville Rendezvous

★★★★ DVD / BLU-RAY: BELLEVILLE RENDEZVOUS Idiosyncratic, lovable French animation, newly reissued

Idiosyncratic, lovable French animation, newly reissued

Why Les Triplettes de Belleville was rechristened Belleville Rendevous in the UK is one of several questions left unanswered by this reissue. Along with what happened to French director Sylvain Chomet’s animation career, which seems to have fizzled out after his 2010 Jacques Tati adaptation The Illusionist.

Scoob! review - mostly bark, little bite

★★★ SCOOB! Feature adaptation crams in a lot of references but not much substance

Feature adaptation crams in a lot of references but not much substance

Scooby fans have waited over 50 years for a proper big screen adaptation of everyone’s favourite cowardly dog (sorry Cartoon Network’s Courage). The 2003 live-action version starring Matthew Lillard and Sarah Michelle Gellar failed to capture the paranormal-busting mystery of the TV series, and although the follow-up Monsters Unleashed recreated the classic villains, it was still a slog.

Trolls World Tour review - a visual spectacle full of toe-tapping tunes

★★★ TROLLS WORLD TOUR  A visual spectacle full of toe-tapping tunes

Anna Kendrick and Justin Timberlake return as the diminutive heroes that just can't stop

The world might have changed drastically in the wake of Covid-19, but thankfully those hyperactive, candy-coloured Trolls haven’t. Anna Kendrick and Justin Timberlake are back as the delightful odd-couple, Poppy and Branch, for round two of pop-infused peppy animated adventure in the land of felt and feelings, where music can solve a myriad of problems.