For up to date local cinema links and day-by-day  listings of what’s showing on local screens every week visit the Virtual-Lancaster Cinema Page. Read on for the weekly round-up, and reviews.

Four new films have been released during this period. There is the comedy drama 20th Century Women (15); suspense mystery with A Cure for Wellness (18); fantasy action in Logan (12A) and the police drama Patriots Day (15).

The region has lost the film Split and it seems that Rings will soon come to an end of its screening. However we do see the return of Assassin’s Creed; the drama I, Daniel Blake; the family favourite Moana and zombie horror in Resident Evil: The Final Chapter.

Drama this period comes with NASA mathematicians Hidden Figures; life on benefits in I, Daniel Blake; the family drama Lion; police action in Patriots Day; space flight with The Space Between Us; and the must see move T2 TrainSpotting.

Action movies on offer are Assassin’s Creed; the wartime epic Hacksaw Ridge; gun action in John Wick: Chapter 2; the X-man Logan; and oriental fantasy with The Great Wall

Family animation is provided by Ballerina; Moana; Sing; The Lego Batman Movie and Trolls.

Romance is on offer with the musical La La Land and the erotic sequel Fifty Shades Darker.

Horror is well represented with the stylish drama A Cure for Wellness, the creepy Rings and zombie horror Resident Evil: The Final Chapter.

Finally, movies of note this period include a giant rabbit in the classic Donnie Darko and culture with the Royal Ballet The Sleeping Beauty.

Reviews



20th Century Women

Director: Mike Mills

Certificate: 15

Cast includes Annette Bening, Lucas Jade Zuman, Greta Gerwig, Billy Crudup, Elle Fanning

Set in Santa Barbara in 1979, Dorothea (Bening) is a divorced mother
bring up her teenage son Jamie (Zuman) whilst running a boarding house.
She feels that her son needs more role models in his life and so
enlists the help of her tenants including handyman William (Crudup),
photographer Abbie (Gerwig) and her sons friend Julie (Fanning) to
assist. A coming of age tale with drama and a good dose of comedy. A
great movie with excellent performances by all. It has received good
reviews.



A Cure for Wellness

Director: Gore Verbinski

Certificate: 18

Cast includes: Dane DeHaan, Harry Groener, Jason Isaacs, Mia Goth

Lockhart (DeHaan) is a young executive, sent to a the wellness centre
health spa in Switzerland to collect the Company CEO Pembroke (Groener)
who is being treated there. However Lockhart is injured and finds
himself staying at the Spa also. He meets Hannah (Goth) a young patient
and she reveals that the spa was built on the ruins of a castle with a
troubled history. Lockhart comes to question the cure offered by Dr
Volmer (Isaacs) the spa director and finds evidence of dubious medical
experiments being carried out. The movie is visually spectacular with
false leads, twists and eels that make up for a rather thin plot. An
enjoyable move.



Fifty Shades Darker

Director: James Foley

Certificate: 18

Cast includes: Dakota Johnson, Jamie Dornan

A sequel to the 2015 film ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’. Anastasia (Johnson)
had broken off her relationship with Christian Grey (Dornan) intending
to pursue a career in a Seattle publishing house. However Christian
entices her back albeit on her terms of a ‘vanilla’ relationship.
However his desire for ownership rather than a relationship and rather
shady figures from his past threaten to destroy their future. A sex and
kink movie that rather lacks the novelty value of the original. Mildly
entertaining.

John Wick: Chapter 2

Director: Chad Stahelski

Certificate: 15

Cast includes: Keanu Reeves, Riccardo Scamercio

The sequel to the 2014 movie. John Wick (Reeves) again comes out of
retirement to honour a blood oath and assist a former associate Santino
D’Antonio (Scamarcio) who is plotting to take control of an
international assassins’ guild. As a consequence Wick finds himself
with a bounty ‘on his head’ and he must go on the run pursued by
assassins looking to kill him. The plot requires a large suspension of
disbelief but the movie provides dizzying action, non stop gun related
pandemonium and some flashes of wit and humour. The movie has been well
received. It offers plenty of entertainment, but little novelty.

La La Land

Director: Damien Chazelle

Certificate: 12A

Cast Includes: Emma Stone, Ryan Gosling

Mia (Stone) works as a barista during the day but aspires to be an
actress. She is involved in a road rage incident with Sebastian
(Gosling) a jazz pianist. The two subsequently meet again and start to
fall for each other as they try to satisfy their ambitions, she
attending auditions and he playing in dingy bars as he plans to open his
own jazz club. However the daily drudge of trying to live their dreams
starts to take its toll. This movie, set in modern day Los Angeles, is
brilliantly written and very well acted. Excellent musical
entertainment.

Moana

Director: Ron Clements and John Musker

Certificate: PG

Cast includes: Auli’i Cravalho, Dwayne Johnson

A Walt Disney animated fantasy adventure. Moana (Cravalho) is
the teenage daughter of the chief of a Polynesian island. However the
fish and island produce become less abundant and hence Moana undertakes a
nautical quest to find the magical amulet Te Fiti’s heart and the
demigod Maui (Johnson). The quest involves monsters and battles This
is a magical film, with music, comedy and a good dose of adventure. It
is extremely well produced and has received excellent reviews from both
critics and audience. A must see movie for all ages.



Resident Evil: The Final Chapter

Director: Paul W S Anderson

Certificate; 15

Cast Includes: Milla Jovovich

The movie is a sequel to the 2012 Resident Evil: Retribution and
forms the sixth and final film in the series. Alice (Jovovich) has
lost her psychic powers and now is assisted by the Red Queen who has
switched sides. She returns to the demolished Raccoon City where, with a
band of survivors, she has one last battle with the Umbrella
Corporation and myriads of mutants and zombies. This reviewer has
greatly enjoyed the Resident Evil Movie series and can recommend the
Final Chapter as offering more of the same special effects and fight
sequences. However the film is not the best of the bunch and the
franchise is now starting to feel a little tired. See it if you are a
Resident Evil fan.

Rings

Director: F Javier Gutierrez

Certificate: 15

Cast includes: Matilda Lutz, Alex Roe Johnny Galecki, Vincent D’Onofrio

Julia (Lutz) becomes worried when her boyfriend Holt (Roe) starts to
explore the sub-cuture around a videotape which causes the death of
anyone who watches it. She watches it herself and discovers that her
version of the tape has additional footage which hints at the fate of
the antagonist Sadako Yamamura. Julie and Holt undertake a quest to
find Sadako’s remains in the hope of lifting the curse. This is the
latest chapter in the Ring franchise and is a sequel to ‘The Ring’
(2002) and ‘The Ring Two’ (2005). The movie tries to move the franchise
onto new ground but it has received poor reviews. It is of interest to
ardent Ring fans only.



T2 Trainspotting

Director: Danny Boyle

Certificate: 18

Cast includes: Ewen McGreger, Ewen Bremner, Robert Carlyle, Jonny Lee Miller, Anjela Nedyalkova

Mark Renton (McGregor) returns to Edinburgh after twenty years in
Amsterdam and finds his old associates are still much as he left them
only older. Spud Murphy (Bremner) continues to struggle with heroin
addiction. Simon ‘Sick Boy’ (Lee Miller) nurses old grievances and has
swapped a heroin addiction for cocaine. He plans to turn a run down pub
onto a bordello. Francis Begbie (Carlyle) is serving a prison
sentence, but he escapes. He still harbours a grievance against Renton.
The movie is part black comedy, part thriller and total melancholic
drama that draws on Welsh’s 1993 novel and the 2002 sequel Porno. This
is an inventive and vibrant film that captures the spirit of the
original. Excellent viewing.