In Review

Welcome to In Review! Check out the latest reviews across film, TV, theatre and so much more…

Film Review Kat Stevens Film Review Kat Stevens

Film Review: The Book of Love

The Book of Love follows an English writer, Henry Copper (Sam Claflin) whose book is translated by into Spanish by translator Maria Rodriguez (Verónica Echegui), who completely rewrites his novel into an erotic romance. 

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Film Review Eoghan Earls Film Review Eoghan Earls

Film Review: Studio 666

Studio 666 was released in late February this year. The story revolves around the band trying to find the inspiration to record their tenth studio album. Unfortunately, this inspiration arrives from a possessed tape, which leads to the usual shenanigans you expect from any horror movie.

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Film Review Zak Wheeler Film Review Zak Wheeler

Film Review: Uncharted

The latest gaming entry in the Uncharted franchise is six years old, the movie itself having been caught in development hell since 2008. The finished product is another addition to the library of OK movies based on better games.

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Film Review Stavroula Louras Film Review Stavroula Louras

Film Review: Quo Vadis, Aida?

This isn’t the typical war movie, like Dunkirk or 1917 where we see men fighting in the trenches. The fight between the Bosnian and Serbian armies is never shown, we never see even a drop of blood, instead, we see the harsh reality of war and the impact it has on everyone, most importantly, the innocent, through the eyes of the affected civilians.

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Film Review: Royal Ballet - Romeo and Juliet

Romeo and Juliet is above all a dramatic tragedy. The characters are dramatic, the plot is dramatic, the ending is perhaps the most dramatic ending to any story ever told. Drama is seeped into every moment of this story, and if this is to be accurately conveyed, ballet is the only appropriate vehicle. 

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Film Review Oscar Ragg Film Review Oscar Ragg

Film Review: The Batman (SPOILER FREE)

The live-action Batman films now span 56 years and 7 different actors – each is a product of its time, and each builds on growing familiarity with the character gained by the mass audience. What Matt Reeves, director of Thursday’s new The Batman, has been able to do with that history is take advantage of it, and iterate. The results are very exciting.

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Film Review Jake Freeman Film Review Jake Freeman

Film Review: Blacklight

Blacklight certainly delivers on entertaining the audience and gives us the Liam Neeson action thriller flick that we have loved since Taken in 2008. However, nearly fourteen years have passed since then and the Liam Neeson over protective father/special ops/Rambo type guy is beginning to wane just a little. 

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Film Review Aimee Traficante Film Review Aimee Traficante

Film Review: Love You Like That

Love You Like That begins in the coastal town of Seafront Sands, the kind of small Australian town where everyone knows each other’s business, and any change in routine, such as the news of a mysterious woman washing up on Mim Beach naked, can send the entire town into a whirlwind.

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Film Review Zak Wheeler Film Review Zak Wheeler

Film Review: Nightmare Alley

Brewing over the course of the late 1930s to early 1940s, Nightmare Alley exposes the selfish pursuit of profits created by the ego of those which prey upon the needy, and the desperation of those who have nothing to lose.

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Film Review Eli Robinson Film Review Eli Robinson

Film Review: Drive My Car

What starts off as a fairly cold and staid experience slowly but surely takes shape, each subtle curve of the narrative shaving what could be a much more generic film in the hands of a lesser filmmaker into something beautiful.

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Film Review Eli Robinson Film Review Eli Robinson

Film Review: Benedetta

Benedetta balances its sexuality and violence with explorations of what those who seek power will do to get it, and what those in power will do to keep the peace, all set against the backdrop of the black plague.

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Film Review Nick Owens Film Review Nick Owens

Film Review: The Scary of Sixty-First

The Scary of Sixty-First, the feature directorial debut of Belarusian-American actress, filmmaker, and podcast host, Dasha Nekrasova, presents itself as two movies. It’s at once an earnest, self-important, mumblecore horror film about passive twenty-somethings being angry at the injustices of the world, or it’s a tongue-in-cheek parody of said pretentious low-budget horror films.

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Film Review Eli Robinson Film Review Eli Robinson

Film Review: Belfast

Belfast takes us on a walk down director Kenneth Branagh’s memory lane, telling the tale of an extraordinarily difficult and violent time in the history of Ireland through the innocent eyes of a child.

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