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.

This is a good period for new film releases. We have drama and suspense with The Equalizer (15) and Gone Girl. Also there is comedy with What We Did on Our Holidays (12A) and finally song and dance with Billy Elliot The Musical (15).

Unfortunately we have lost the film The Nut Job. Also it is looking like the films Guardians of the Galaxy, How to Train Your Dragon 2, Lets Be Cops and Sin City 2: A Dame to Kill For are soon to come to the end of screening.

Highlight this week are a double bill of Gone Girl/Fight Club being shown at the Vue on 1st October. Also there is a live screening of an audience with Stephen Fry with More Fool Me at the Dukes also on the 1st.

Reviews

A Most Wanted Man

Director: Anton Corbijn

Certificate: 15

Cast Includes: Rachel McAdams, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Robin Wright, Willem Dafoe, Grigoriy Dabrygin

The film is an adaptation of John le Carre’s novel of the same
name and is also the last role of the late Philip Hoffman. Gunther
Bachmann (Hoffman) is an intelligence officer working in Hamburg who
becomes aware of a tortured half Chechen half Russian immigrant Issar
Karpov (Dabrygin) who has arrived in Hamburg to claim asylum and seek
his fathers fortune. However is the immigrant a victim or is he a
terrorist? If the latter could he be played to lead the security forces
to others higher in the terrorist chain? Hoffman steals much of the
film with his world weary character and the movie unfolds by covert
meetings and dark conversations. This is an intricate, well directed,
gripping espionage film.

A Walk Among The Tombstones

Director: Scott Frank

Certificate: 15

Cast Includes: Liam Neeson, Ruth Wilson, David Harbour, Robert
Boyd Holbrook, Dan Stevens, Adam David Thompson, Brian Bradley

Set in 1999 and based on the tenth book in Lawrence Block’s
best selling crime series. Matt Scudder (Neeson) used to be an
alcoholic police officer until a disastrous shootout caused him to give
up both. Now he works as an unlicensed private eye and, with some
reluctance, he agrees to help find the men who kidnapped and killed the
wife of a drug trafficker (Stevens). Scudder discovers the kidnappers
are serial killers and, helped by a homeless teenager (Bradley), who
acts as his apprentice he tracks them down. Neeson gives a strong
performance in this atmospheric thriller. There are quite a few sub
plots during the course of this movie as it builds to up a violent
conclusion. A fine film.

Before I Go to Sleep

Director: Rowan Joffe

Certificate: 15

Cast Includes: Nicole Kidman, Colin Firth, Anne-Marie Duff, Mark Strong

A movie based on the best selling 2011 book by S J Watson.
Christine Lucas (Kidman) suffered a head trauma thirteen years ago, with
the consequence that she starts each day with no memories of the past
thirteen years. She does not recognise her husband, her doctor nor even
her own face. To try make sense of her world, she starts to keep a
video diary and in this way can begin to get some continuity in her
thoughts. However this reveals that her husband Ben (Firth) and her
doctor (Strong) are concealing something from her. This film is a
psychological thriller which successfully builds suspense with twists to
the plot and some false trails. An enjoyable thriller.

Earth to Echo

Director: Dave Green

Certificate: PG

Cast includes: Teo Halm, Ella Linnea Wahlestedt, Reese C. Hartwig, Jason Gray-Stanford

A construction project is destroying a neighbourhood when a
group of friends start to receive strange signals on their phones. They
search for the origin of the signals and discover an alien who has
become trapped on earth. The film tells the story of the youngsters as
they battle the government and help the alien return to his home. It is
hard not to compare this film with ‘E.T.’ However the movie is really
about the youthful friendships rather than an extra-terrestrial. A
entertaining if rather average family film.

Frozen

Director: Chris Buck

Certificate PG

Cast Includes Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel, Josh Gad,Alan Tudyk, Jonathan Groff

This Disney musical animation is loosely based on the fairy
tale ‘The Snow Queen’ who has condemned a kingdom to eternal winter. It
is up to Anna (sister to the snow queen) and a loner Kristoff to
undertake an epic journey to find the Snow Queen and convince her to
lift the icy spell. This is a magical movie destined to become a
classic. It will appeal to families and children of all ages.

Guardians of the Galaxy

Director: James Gunn

Certificate: 12A

Cast Includes: Zoe Saldana, Chris Pratt, Michael Rooker, Lee Pace

An action packed space adventure from Marvel. Adventurer
Peter Quill (Pratt) steals a mysterious artifact which is wanted by the
villain Ronan (Pace) who wishes to use it to destroy the planet of
Xandar. This forces Quill into a truce with a group of misfits
(including Rocket a talking raccoon and groot a walking tree) who find
they must make a stand to determine the fate of the galaxy. This is a
very ‘busy’ film with lots of spectacular action, plenty of great
characters, great one liners and lots of jokes. The plot seemed a
little convoluted, but just go with it and enjoy the action. The movie
does not take itself very seriously and will be loved by teenagers and
adults alike.

Lucy

Director: Luc Besson

Certificate: 15

Cast Includes: Scarlett Johansson, Morgan Freeman

Lucy (Johansson), a rather average American woman visiting
Taiwan, is kidnapped by gangsters, abused and made to smuggle an
experimental new drug which is sewn into her stomach. However a beating
received by one of the gangsters causes the bag to rupture and she
absorbs the drug, with the effect of increasing the efficiency of her
brain. This leads her to outgrow her physical and mental limitations as
she develops vast intellect and formidable psychic powers. Lucy can
now take her revenge. This is a fun film with the story told from
Lucy’s point of view. However as her powers develop the revenge part of
the movie becomes very one sided and the film sacrifices action
sequences for a quest to understand her evolution into something that is
beyond human.

Pride

Director: Matthew Warchus

Certificate: 15

Cast Includes: Bill Nighty, Dominic West, Imelda Staunton Joe Gilgun, Ben Schnetzer

The film is based on a true story and is set in the summer of
1984 during the miners strike. Mark Ashton, a member of a London based
gay and lesbian group organises a collection for the miners. However
when the group came to offer the donation, they were rebuffed due to
prejudice (the AIDs epidemic is one of the backdrops to the film). The
group therefore decide to bus to a mining village in the Welsh Dulais
Valley to make the donation personally. This movie is played for
laughs. It is an excellent comedy supported by an excellent cast and it
explores the clash of two very different cultures.

Sin City: A Dame to Kill For

Director: Frank Miller & Robert Rodriguez

Certificate: 18

Cast includes: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Josh Brolin, Mickey
Rourke, Eva Green, Rosario Dawson, Jessica Alba, Powers Boothe, Clive
Owen

It has been nine years since the initial Sin City was
released, based on the graphic novels of Frank Miller. This film has
the same spirit (and some of the same characters) as the original and
again is shot in black and white (relieved with effective splashes of
colour). It is shot in a style half way between live action and
animation. The film comprises a couple of interlocking narratives.
There is the return of Senator Roark (Boothe) which gives some of the
characters motive for revenge. Also there is the relationship between
Dwight McCarthy (Owen) and his ex Ava (Green) who gets him to commit
murder. The film has an impressive cast, nudity and stylised violence as
it explores power and its abuse.

The Equalizer

Director: Antoine Fuqua

Certificate: 15

Cast includes: Denzel Washington, Chloe Grace Moretz, Bill Pullman, Marton Csokas.

A big screen adaption of the 1980’s TV drama series which
starred Edward Woodward. Now Washington takes on the role of McCall, a
black ops commando who faked his own death so he could retire to an
uneventful existence in Boston. McCall is a childless widow, working in
a superstore and with a fondness for reading. He befriends Teri
(Moretz) a young woman who works as a prostitute. However she is beaten
and hospitalized by Russian gangsters. McCall decides to use his
skills to retaliate and as a result finds himself the target of a
Russian team led by a psychopath Teddy (Csokas). Washington is a
consummate actor who plays the role with skill and conviction. However
the whole is essentially a violent vigilante movie. Entertaining and
believable but the film does not break any new ground.

The Hundred-Foot Journey

Director: Lasse Hallstrom

Certificate: PG

Cast Includes: Helen Mirren, Manish Dayal, Om Puri, Charlotte Le Bon

A Walt Disney adaptation of the 2010 novel by Richard C
Morais. The Kadam’s are an Indian family that were displaced due to
political rioting. They arrive at a quaint but rather conservative
French Village and decide to open an Indian Restaurant, the Maison
Mumbai. However just across the road is a classical, Michelin starred
restaurant Le Saule Pleureur run by Madame Mallory (Mirren). This leads
to fall-outs and ultimately sabotage between the two institutions.
Meanwhile Hassan (Dayal) the master cook of the Indian restaurant begins
a flirtation with Marguerite (Le Bon), the sous chef of Mme Mallory’s
restaurant. This is a well acted and endearing movie with plenty of
laughs. Entertaining but lacking suspense.

What We Did on Our Holidays

Director: Andy Hamilton, Guy Jenkins

Certificate: 12A

Cast Includes: Rosamund Pike, David Tennant, Billy Connolly

Doug (Tennant) and Abi (Pike) are a married couple on the cusp
of a divorce. Despite this, they decide to take their three children
to Scotland to attend a family gathering to celebrate the 75th birthday
of Gordie (Connolly), Doug’s father. In conversation, the children let
slip to the wider family the details of their life in London and the
parents arguments. Hence tension and family feuds ensue. The
characters of the film are based on the TV series ‘Outnumbered’ and the
film is in part comedy sitcom and in part an emotional ‘roller-coaster’.
Despite fine acting (with Connolly in particular fine form) the final
third of the film seemed a little flat.