A Man Called Ove a tricky sell
REVIEW: The chipper, almost cavalier manner in which A Man Called Ove switches from the hard stuff to the hugs will not accommodate all tastes.
REVIEW: The chipper, almost cavalier manner in which A Man Called Ove switches from the hard stuff to the hugs will not accommodate all tastes.
REVIEW: Land of Mine takes the viewer deep inside the haunted, hunted psyches of blighted souls forced to pay for the sins of their Nazi fathers.
REVIEW: The big-budget mainstream take on your favourite cyberpunk saga Ghost In The Shell does not let the team down in any way that can’t be somehow forgiven.
REVIEW: Everything is still awesome in the Lego movie-verse as The Lego Batman Movie zings from one surreally silly sequence to the next.
THE Two Faces of January: A downmarket incident at an upmarket hotel is at the centre of a skilful thriller that will have you firmly in its grip.
FRANK: Which X-men star is courageous — or crazy — enough to spend an entire film hidden under a giant papier mache head?
22 JUMP Street: Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill share a rare comedic connection that money just can’t buy in a film that cracks plenty of strong gags at its own expense.
RISING from Ashes: Be inspired as survivors of the Rwandan massacre became an international cycling force racing all the way to the London Olympics.
GALORE: Puberty Blues’ Ashleigh Cummings, a teenage love triangle and the 2003 Canberra bushfires. Does Australia really need another coming-of-age drama?
BLENDED: With the regular release of two-tonne turkeys Adam Sandler is clearly Not Really Trying. But no matter how bad, enough tickets will be sold to justify another one.
THE Rover: Guy Pearce is ready to rumble, Robert Pattinson is ready to mumble in a movie destined to crumple under the expectations heaped on it.
GOOD Vibrations: Discover if the song hailed as “the greatest rock recording of all time” in the 1970s stands the test of time.
THE Face of Love: Annette Bening gets the worst of the script, but that’s not to say Ed Harris doesn’t have to utter a howler or two of his own.
HOW to Train Your Dragon 2: Some films hit the ground running. This sequel knows full well it can go one better than that.
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