Silver Haze review - daughters of Albion dealing with damage

Vicky Knight and Esmé Creed-Miles shine in a drama inspired by Knight's tragic past

In a Dagenham hospital, Silver Haze’s compassionate nurse Franky, played by Vicky Knight, meets Florence (Esmé Creed-Miles), who’s been admitted as a patient for having attempted suicide. After Franky dumps her boyfriend, the two women begin a tempestuous affair – or is that a tautology?                   

Late Night With the Devil review - indie-horror punches above its weight

Controversy over AI-generated images aside, this is a wholly original film

In Late Night With the Devil, light entertainment rubs shoulders with demonic forces on a talk show. It isn't quite the homerun its 97% Rotten Tomatoes rating would suggest, but this Australian indie production punches above its weight with an effective found-footage concept and lived-in 1970s setting. Regrettably, excitement for the movie's long-awaited cinema release has been dampened by controversy over its makers' use of AI-generated images.

May December review - a queasy take on sexual exploitation

★★ MAY DECEMBER Todd Haynes reunites with Julianne Moore in a stylish but cold melodrama

Todd Haynes reunites with Julianne Moore in a stylish but cold melodrama

There’s much to admire  here – May December features impressive performances from Julianne Moore and Natalie Portman, and director Todd Haynes shows his mastery of classic Sirkian style. But disappointingly, this comes across as a movie that aims to critique media exploitation of a scandal while indulging in its own manipulation.  

Our River... Our Sky review - another people's war

★★★ OUR RIVER ... OUR SKY Vital but overstuffed drama of ordinary lives in a mixed Baghdad neighbourhood under fire

Vital but overstuffed drama of ordinary lives in a mixed Baghdad neighbourhood under fire

The first casualty of war is not truth, as the saying goes, but humanity – and not just in the sense of collateral damage. Media reporting turns victims into news items, along with satellite images of wrecked buildings or tanks crawling through a desert.

It happens every time. This morning, on BBC News, the Palestinian journalist Taghreed El-Khodary patiently explained what the Israeli blockade of Gaza means in terms of journalism. No reporter can reach the scene of the catastrophe to bear witness. “The human stories are missing,” she added.

Pacifiction review - portending hell in paradise

★★★★★ PACIFICTION Albert Serra's spellbinding anti-colonial drama

The French High Commissioner fears Polynesia's destruction in Albert Serra's spellbinding anti-colonial drama

Paranoia seeps into paradise in Albert Serra’s Pacifiction, a scathing critique of French colonialism on the Polynesian island of Tahiti. Acting on rumours that his overlords are about to resume nuclear testing in the region and fearing his elimination, the urbane High Commissioner De Roller (Benoît Magimel) is forced to turn detective to learn their veracity. It’s not his fault that Inspector Clouseau might do a better job.

Blu-ray: Something in the Dirt

BLU-RAY: SOMETHING IN THE DIRT Moorhead and Benson find cosmic conspiracies and fractured friendship in weird LA

Moorhead and Benson find cosmic conspiracies and fractured friendship in weird LA

Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson deal in the modern eerie and truly weird, placing relationships under supernatural pressure with unsettling empathy. Where genre-schooled peers such as Ti West and Adam Wingard splice post-slacker, naturalistic conversation with skin-flaying horror, Moorhead and Benson scare with cracks in reality, reflecting quietly broken protagonists.

Wildcat review - damaged war veteran reborn in the Peruvian jungle

★★★★ WILDCAT Damaged war veteran reborn in the Peruvian jungle

How a man found salvation in the love of a good cat

The bond between humans and animals sometimes passeth all understanding. Wildcat is the story of 20-something British Army veteran Harry Turner, American ecologist Samantha Zwicker, and a young ocelot called Keanu, who becomes an almost mythic talisman of Harry’s battle with post-traumatic stress and suicidal urges.

Juniper review - a classic role for Charlotte Rampling

★★★★ JUNIPER A grandmother in New Zealand faces up to death, a grandson to life

A grandmother in New Zealand faces up to death, a grandson to life

Juniper provides, above all, an absolutely unforgettable role for Charlotte Rampling. New Zealander Matthew J Saville, who devised the script and directed the film, based her character, Ruth, on his own feisty and well-travelled grandmother, who had led a full life, and then returned home – where she drank substantial quantities of gin every day.