Run review – wheels on fire in Scotland

Dreams of leaving flavored by Bruce Springsteen's 'Born to Run'

Run is the story of disgruntled 36-ish Finnie (Mark Stanley), a big, dour worker in a fish processing plant in the Aberdeenshire port of Fraserburgh – writer-director Scott Graham’s hometown. Long married to his onetime high-school sweetheart Katie (Amy Manson), and the father of twentyish Kid (Anders Hayward) and adolescent Stevie (Scott Murray), Finnie wants to get the hell out – or he thinks he does.

DVD/Blu-ray: Last Holiday

★★★★ LAST HOLIDAY Alec Guinness shines in underappreciated black comedy

Alec Guinness shines in underappreciated black comedy

There’s a scarily prescient scene at the start of Henry Cass’s 1950 black comedy Last Holiday, a village surgery’s waiting room crammed with coughers and wheezers.

DVD/Blu-ray: Bait

Mark Jenkin's acclaimed first feature: tensions spark within a Cornish fishing village

Mark Jenkin’s black and white masterpiece about clashes between incomers and locals in a Cornish fishing village was made on a 1976 clockwork Bolex camera that doesn’t record sound – all that’s added later, including the actors’ voices – and hand-processed by him in an old rewind tank in his studio in Newlyn.

1917 review – immersive, exemplary war film

BAFTA FILM AWARDS 2020 Best Film and Best Director on a board-sweeping night for '1917'

Sam Mendes makes his most personal film to date – and one of his most accomplished

The greatest war films are those which capture the terrifying physical and psychological ordeal that soldiers face, along with the sheer folly and waste of it all –  Paths of Glory, Come and See, Apocalypse Now, Saving Private Ryan, most recently Dunkirk. Sam Mendes’ 1917, which has just won two Golden Globes and could well triumph at the Oscars, joins their ranks.

The Runaways review - a road trip worth taking

★★★★ THE RUNAWAYS Charming British flick carried by three children's bravura performances

Charming British flick carried by three children's bravura performances

Oh how British indies love a road trip. Trekking across the rugged landscape, meeting a colourful cast of characters, realising it’s not the destination but the journey. It takes something special to stand out from the pack. The Runaways, debut feature from Richard Heap, has that something special.

The Gentlemen review - it ain't woke but don't fix it

★★★★ THE GENTLEMEN It ain't woke but don't fix it

Guy Ritchie's rambunctious caper movie is just like old times

Guy Ritchie enjoyed his greatest commercial success with 2019’s live-action fantasy Aladdin, the most atypical project of his career, but The Gentlemen finds him back on his best-known turf as a purveyor of mouthy, ultra-violent geezerism. It’s 21 years since his debut hit with Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, but its shaggy-dog story-telling and spirit of high-wire anarchy resurface intact.

DVD/Blu-ray: The Holly and the Ivy

A repressed middle-class clan gathers for Christmas in rarely seen British gem

British cinema has done so badly by Christmas that the revival of a film that parses the nature of the festival while mining its potential for sparking family strife is cause for celebration.