Two is a Family is weapons-grade heart-tugger
A HAPPY-go-lucky playboy living it large on the Côte d’Azur — played by the biggest movie star of African descent on the planet — has a one-night stand that propels him into fatherhood.
A HAPPY-go-lucky playboy living it large on the Côte d’Azur — played by the biggest movie star of African descent on the planet — has a one-night stand that propels him into fatherhood.
BELLE & Sebastian: Friends for Life — the third in a wonderful series — has Sebastian’s family planning to leave their idyllic home in the Alps now the troubled WWII times are behind them. But the 12-year-old is still doing it tough.
WITHOUT anyone really noticing — but obviously, a hell of a lot of people watching — the Hotel Transylvania series, with Adam Sandler lending his voice as Dracula, is one of the biggest animation franchises of the day.
ADRIFT, a compelling, based-on-a-true-story survivalist yarn, captures the emotional trauma felt during 41 days of being marooned on a half-wrecked boat after a hurricane hits in the Pacific. It’ll put you through the ringer, and then some.
MOVIE review: The new B-grade buddy comedy Let’s Be Cops progresses steadily through three distinct phases.
MOVIE review: No one’s going to mistake My Old Lady for Let’s Be Cops in this or any other lifetime.
MOVIE review: If we are to learn anything from the magnificently miserable crime drama The Drop, it is that there is no honour among thieves.
OSCAR-winner Marion Cotillard displays deep quality and subtle grace notes as a battling woman put in an impossible position in Two Days, One Night.
THIS absorbing documentary unravels the mystery behind one of the most significant street photographers of the 20th century.
THERE’S a sense of the inevitable about the destination but Love, Rosie’s rom-com journey is appealing thanks to the chemistry of Lily Collins and Sam Clafin.
MOVIE review: Batman director Christopher Nolan reaches for the stars with Interstellar, one of the most spectacular, thought-provoking and rewarding films of the year.
REVIEW: The Young and Prodigious T.S. Spivet is a spectacular showcase for the visual flair of Ameliedirector Jean-Pierre Jeunet.
Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/entertainment/movies/leigh-paatsch/page/188