Scrapper review - home alone, but then Dad turns up

★★★★ SCRAPPER Charlotte Regan makes a promising debut with estranged family drama

Director Charlotte Regan makes a promising debut with this tale of a motherless girl and her estranged father

It’s the summer holidays, and though Georgie (Lola Campbell) is only 12, she’s managing to keep her council house looking just the way her mum liked it. There may be a few spiders hanging around but they have names and personalities and there’s food in the cupboard, even if it’s been paid for from the proceeds of selling the bikes Georgie has stolen.  

Medusa Deluxe review - combing for clues in a stylish murder mystery

Thomas Hardiman's debut feature goes underground in the world of competition hairdressing

Medusa is having a moment. From Natalie Haynes’ feminist novel to the recent Brazilian horror movie, the beleaguered, beheaded, snake-haired monstress of Greek myth rises again, and again, as a symbol of female rage and resistance.

Inland review - a cracked mosaic of memories, impressions and lurking anxiety

★★★ INLAND A cracked mosaic of memories, impressions and lurking anxiety

An enigmatic and allusive debut feature from Fridtjof Ryder

Fridtjof Ryder’s debut feature made a strong impression at last year’s London Film Festival, and its cinema release ought to give the Gloucester-born director’s career a hefty shove in the right direction. Although that doesn’t mean that Inland is an especially easy-viewing experience.

Blu-ray: Croupier

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: CROUPIER A masterpiece from the late Mike Hodges, giant of British cinema

A masterpiece from the late Mike Hodges, giant of British cinema

The recently-departed director Mike Hodges was one of our most underrated filmmakers. Along with Get Carter (1971), a dark story of revenge starring Michael Caine, Croupier (1998) – newly released on 4K Ultra HD – is one of the most fascinating and superbly crafted films of late 20th century British cinema. It’s so good, at many different levels, that it bears watching over and over again.

Blu-ray: Nil by Mouth

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: NIL BY MOUTH Gary Oldman's sole film as a director casts a cool eye on the London of his youth

Gary Oldman's sole film as a director casts a cool eye on the London of his youth

Greg Urbanski, Gary Oldman’s long-term producing partner, tells us on the commentary track that no film company wanted to touch the script of Nil by Mouth. Oldman was riding high as an actor in 1996, renowned for his shape-shifting performances as Sid Vicious and Joe Orton in the UK, and Lee Harvey Oswald, Beethoven and Dracula in the US. 

Give Them Wings review - down but not out in Darlington

Daniel Watson and Toyah Willcox shine as a disabled man and his doughty mam

Give Them Wings is the biopic of Paul Hodgson, who seven months after he was born in 1965 was diagnosed with meningococcal meningitis. If that wasn’t bad enough, he survived his precarious childhood to become a devout fan of Durham’s hapless Darlington FC – it’s criminal that this low-budget British indie wasn’t titled Give Them Wingers.

Blu-ray: Get Carter

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: GET CARTER Super-cool Michael Caine is at his best in Mike Hodges's masterpiece of British cinema

Super-cool Michael Caine is at his best in Mike Hodges's masterpiece of British cinema

Director Mike Hodges's Get Carter (1971) has been praised as the best British gangster film. I would go even further, and put it up against the best gangster films of all time, on the same level as Lang’s The Big Heat (1953), Melville’s Le deuxième souffle (1966), Boorman’s Point Blank (1967), Polanski’s Chinatown (1974) and Scorsese’s Goodfellas (1990).

All My Friends Hate Me review - beware of the bilious

★★★ ALL MY FRIENDS HATE ME Tom Stourton's 'friends' are a foul bunch in snarky new comedy

Peter's 'friends' are a foul bunch in snarky new comedy

A birthday weekend in Devon goes rather badly wrong in All My Friends Hate Me, the new film co-written by its leading man, Tom Stourton, that looks guaranteed to make shut-ins of us all.

The Camera Is Ours - Britain's Women Documentary Makers review - four decades of directors rediscovered

★★★ THE CAMERA IS OURS - BRITAIN'S WOMEN DOCUMENTARY MAKERS Four decades of directors rediscovered 

Revelations in British social history from the Thirties to the Sixties through the eyes of women

The Camera Is Ours features films made from 1935-1967 by women like Marion and Ruby Grierson, Evelyn Spice and Margaret Thomson, whose names should be engraved in the history of British film-making.

Blu-ray: The Gentle Gunman

★★ BLU-RAY: THE GENTLE GUNMAN Interesting but flawed thriller on an Irish political theme from the Ealing stable

Interesting but flawed thriller on an Irish political theme from the Ealing stable

Ealing Studios’ output encompassed much more than comedy, though a viewing of 1952’s The Gentle Gunman suggests that political drama wasn't one of their strengths.