Drive-Away Dolls review - larky lesbian road movie with some iffy gear changes

★★ DRIVE-AWAY DOLLS Larky lesbian road movie with some iffy gear changes 

Comic violent caper meets queer romcom, both ending up shortchanged

There’s a Coen brother directing, plus a cast that includes Matt Damon, Pedro Pascal, Oscar nominee Colman Domingo and Margaret Qualley, the standout hitchhiker in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood… so why does Drive-Away Dolls feel so insubstantial?

Blu-ray: Fill 'er Up With Super

Masculine barriers fall with a sigh in a freewheeling French Seventies road movie

This almost forgotten, naturalistic 1976 road movie lets four young Frenchmen off the leash in a cross-country trip from Lille to Cannes.

DVD: Wayfinder

An Afrofuturist road movie through eerie, emptied English landscapes

Road movies in England work better by foot. Slowing down finds the scale to explore our small island, tramping Chaucer’s pilgrim paths, not Kerouac’s roaring highway.

Hit the Road review - leaving Tehran for truth and freedom

★★★★ HIT THE ROAD Panah Panahi’s accomplished, witty and humane road movie debut

Panah Panahi’s accomplished, witty and humane debut is a road movie that speaks far beyond his native Iran

The trailer for Panah Panahi’s award-winning first feature Hit the Road is one of the most misleading I’ve yet seen thanks to its jaunty Western pop soundtrack and reassuring caption that the movie resembles an Iranian Little Miss Sunshine.

Blu-ray: Radio On

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: RADIO ON British cinema's finest road movie is anti-British cinema

British cinema's finest road movie is anti-British cinema

Chris Petit's Radio On, his 1979 debut as writer-director, should be regarded as the first British psychogeography film.

The Best Films Out Now

THE BEST FILMS OUT NOW theartsdesk recommends the top movies of the moment

theartsdesk recommends the top movies of the moment

There are films to meet every taste in theartsdesk's guide to the best movies currently on release. In our considered opinion, any of the titles below is well worth your attention.

Enola Holmes ★★★★ Millie Bobby Brown gives the patriarchy what-for in a new Sherlock-related franchise

DVD: Paris, Texas

The two families of Wim Wenders' American masterpiece

An aerial shot gliding over red-streaked buttes in the Southwestern American desert picks out a man striding across the blasted terrain some miles away. He halts and the camera comes close for a montage. We see that he is middle-aged, bony, and unshaven and wears a jacket, tie and red baseball cap.

Blu-ray: Detour

Edgar G Ulmer's film noir road movie is a thing of sordid beauty

“Whichever way you turn, fate sticks out a foot to trip you,” Al Roberts (Tom Neal) says in Detour (1945), as if his native pessimism and self-destructive choices had nothing to do with his inexorable descent into hell.