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Tatsumi – review

In this animated movie, Eric Khoo, a Singapore film-maker, pays tribute to the manga artist Yoshihiro Tatsumi, who in the 1950s created a new kind of serious Japanese comic, the "gekiga". The film artfully combines, though sometimes rather confusingly,...

The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo – review

Newcomer Rooney Mara makes a superb Lisbeth Salander in David Fincher's faithful remake of the gritty Swedish crime thrillerIn 1936 the Hollywood mogul David O Selznick bought the Swedish movie Intermezzo, signed up its star Ingrid Bergman and remade i...

Hugo – review

Martin Scorsese leaves his mean streets behind for this exhilarating family tale inspired by the birth of cinemaThe families we most associate with Martin Scorsese are the five criminal ones that make up the mafia in the United States, and both they an...

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part One – review

The makers of this fourth film in the series based on Stephenie Meyer's vampire bestsellers follow the example of another lucrative franchise, the Harry Potter pictures, both in offering no helpful synopsis to newcomers and in filming the final novel i...

Then Again: A Memoir by Diane Keaton – review

Diane Keaton's autobiography is an endearing ramble that reveals more about her close relationship with her mother than it does about her filmsYou would not expect a memoir by Diane Keaton to be a conventional "as told to" or ghosted showbusiness autob...

Wuthering Heights – review

The Yorkshire landscape steals the show in Andrea Arnold's stark, uneasy adaptation of Emily Brontë's tragic romanceIn the version of Cole Porter's "Let's Do It" that he used in his Las Vegas nightclub act in the 1950s, Noël Coward included a celebra...

Saul Bass: A Life in Film & Design by Jennifer Bass and Pat Kirkham – review

An epic survey of Saul Bass's career shows why he was the master of graphic film titlesThe 1950s in America are widely regarded as an era of dull conformity. In fact this was a period of considerable liveliness and innovation. The books that fuelled th...

Judy Moody and the Not Bummer Summer – review

Based on a series of American children's books, this piece of half-term fodder about a bright 10-year-old girl, a sort of Pollyanna with attitude, could be much worse. It's about trying to have a thrilling summer holiday while staying at home with a li...

Hamlet/ King Lear – DVD review

(Grigori Kozintsev, 1964/ 1971, PG, Mr Bongo Films)Grigori Kozintsev (1905-1973) was a prominent figure in Soviet cinema from his late teens until his death, making ambitious political films until after the second world war when he turned to literary a...

Everything Must Go – review

Will Ferrell plays it straight as a bitter alcoholic in Dan Rush's finely observed adaptation of a Raymond Carver short storyThe novel long preceded the short story, and in his celebrated history of the short story Walter Allen calls Walter Scott's "Th...

In Glorious Technicolor by Francine Stock | review

An ambitious attempt to write a 'personal' history of cinema is sometimes intelligent but rarely convincingMaxim Gorky, the first major writer to record his impressions of the cinema, wrote in his local newspaper the day after seeing the first Lumière...

The Three Musketeers – review

There have been endless film versions of Dumas's swashbuckling novel since Douglas Fairbanks's 1921 The Three Musketeers, the best of which is Dick Lester's 1973 picture and the poorest, until this week, Allan Dwan's 1939 musical, where the Ritz Brothe...

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