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.

There are four new movies on offer during this period. There is Woody Allen’s romantic comedy Cafe Society (12A); a drama based on the recent oil spillage in Deepwater Horizon (12A). In addition there is family fantasy in Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children (12A) and finally a suspense drama The Girl on the Train (12A). In addition we see the return, for one day only, of Star Trek Beyond.

Movies that have disappeared from the screens include Bad Moms; Ben-Hur; Ghostbusters; Jason Bourne and The Neighbour. In addition the following appear to be coming to an end of their screening: Kubo and the Two Strings; Lights Out; Pete’s Dragon; Nine Lives; The BFG and War Dogs.

Family entertainment this period comes with the old favourites Finding Dory; Ice Age: Collision Course; Kubo and the Two Strings; Nine Lives; Pete’s Dragon; The BFG and The Secret Lives of Pets. In addition we have the new additions of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children and the animation Porco Russo.

Drama this period comes with Bridget Jones’s Baby; Deepwater Horizon; The Girl on the Train; The Magnificent Seven and War Dogs. In addition there is science fiction with the pioneering 1950’s Forbidden Planet and the return of Star Trek Beyond. Finally horror comes with Blair Witch; Don’t Breathe; Lights Out and zombie action in The Girl with all the Gifts.

For adult humour there is the animation Sausage Party.

Films featuring cult musicians come with The Beatles: Eight Days a Week and The Man who fell to Earth.

Finally, high culture this period comes with RSC: Live Cymbeline.

Reviews

Blair Witch

Director: Adam Wingard

Certificate: 15

Cast includes: James Alen McCure, Callie Hernandez, Corbin Reid, Brandon Scott

This is a sequel to the 1999 ‘Blair Witch’ movie. James Donahue
(McCure) thinks his sister Heather, who disappeared twenty years ago,
may still be alive in the Black Hills Forest of Maryland. He, along
with a group of friends and a couple of guides, enter the forest to
explore the facts surrounding the Blair Witch and Heather’s
disappearance. As the night comes, all hell starts to breaks loose.
The movie is in the ‘found footage’ genre and it comes with plenty of
frights and some original twists, despite remaining faithful to the
original film. A very competent horror movie though it doesn’t quite
capture the novelty of the original.

Bridget Jones’s Baby

Director: Sharon Maguire

Certificate: 15

Cast Includes: Renee Zellweger, Emma Thompson, Colin Firth, Patrick Dempsey

After a break of twelve years, this is the third instalment of the
romantic comedy franchise and author Helen Fielding co-wrote the script.
Bridge Jones is now aged forty-three and still single, having broken up
with Mark Darcy (Firth). She decided to concentrate on her career as a
news producer. However she meets a handsome American Jack (Dempsey)
and has consecutive one night stands with both Jack and Mark. She finds
herself pregnant, but does not know which one is the father. This
movie captures the spirit of the original and is an improvement on the
previous ‘Edge of Reason’. It is set in London with Jones in her old
flat and the movie features strong acting both from Zellweger and from
Thompson. There are some very funny moments and excellent one liners.

Finding Dory

Director: Andrew Stanton, Angus MacLane

Certificate: U

Cast Includes: Ellen DeGeneres, Albert Brooks, Ed O’Neill, Hayden Rolence

Pixar’s sequel to the 2003 movie ‘Finding Nemo’. Dory (DeGeneres), who
helped reunite Nemo (Rolence) with his father Marlin (Brooks) in the
first movie, has a flashback in which she remembers her own family. She
decides to look for them despite her problems with a faulty memory.
Marlin and Nemo agree to help and the three swim to California to start
the search. Dory is caught and held in a marine life institute aquarium
for shipping to Cleveland. However with the help of Hank (O’Neill),
the octopus she escapes back to the ocean and finds her parents Charlie
and Jenny. Now she has to come to the aid of Marlin and Nemo who are
also imprisoned in the institute aquarium. The movie is essentially the
same plot as the original, but provides impressive animation and
contains some emotional scenes. However this is ultimately a fun ‘happy
ever after’ sort of film that will delight people of all ages.

Ice Age: Collision Course

Director: Mike Thurmeier and Galen T Chu

Cast includes: Simon Pegg, Roy Romano, Jennifer Lopez, Queen Latifah, Hohn Leguizamo, Denis Leary, Chris Wedge

A computer animation family adventure film. This is the fifth
instalment in the Ice Age series and the sequel to Continental Drift.
Scratt (Wedge), the sabre toothed squirrel, activates an alien UFO in
his continued pursuit of the acorn. The craft propels Scratt into outer
space and thence causes a planetary collision resulting in the creation
of meteors that threaten to engulf the earth. Manny (Romero) the Wooly
Mammoth, Sid (Leguizamo) the sloth and Diego (Leary) the sabre toothed
tiger hatch a plan with the weasel Buck (Pegg) to save the earth. The
plot is quite unbelievable, but the resulting mayhem is as entertaining
as ever. New characters are introduced as the movie unfolds and the
film a worthy addition to the franchise. Whats not to like?

The Girl on the Train

Director: Tate Taylor

Certificate: 12A

Cast includes Emily Blunt, Haley Bennett, Luke Evans, Justin Theroux

A movie based on Paula Hawkins best selling 2015 novel of the same
name. Rachel (Blunt) is an alcoholic who recently divorced her husband
Tom (Theroux). She commutes every day by train and on her journey she
fantasises about the seemingly perfect couple Scott (Evans) and Megan
(Bennett) Hipwell who live in a house that she passes. Rachel witnesses
something shocking on her journey and then hears Megan Hipwell is
missing. She tells the police and starts her own investigation. Yet she
cannot remember where where she was on the night of Megan’s
disappearance, and Megan and Scott are neighbours of her ex husband.
Hence Rachel find the police start to suspect she is involved in the
mystery. This is a well acted first rate mystery with a plot that
provides a good number of unexpected turns. A must-see movie.

The Girl with all the Gifts

Director: Colm McCarthy

Certificate: 15

Cast Includes: Gemma Arterton, Sennia Nanua, Paddy Considine, Glenn Close.

Set in the near future, most of humanity is infected by a fungal
disease that robs its victims of free-will, turning then into flesh
eating ‘hungries’. A small group of children show some signs of
resistance. When infected, they retain their free will and only crave
flesh when they smell bodily fluids. These children are imprisoned in a
military base where they are schooled by Helen Justineau (Arterton) and
studied by Dr Caldwell (Close) who is trying to make a vaccine. The
base is invaded. One of the brightest children Melanie (Nanua), along
with a handful of adults must fight for survival and in the process
Malanie starts to mature. This is an intelligent zombie movie, based on
the novel by M. R. Carey. It benefits from a strong cast and some
developments of the zombie genre. A good and entertaining horror film.

The Secret Life of Pets

Director: Chris Renaud, Yarrow Cheney

Certificate: U

Cast Includes: Louis C.K., Ellie Kemper, Eric Stonestreet, Kevin Hart

A family animation film that follows the lives of pets living in
a Manhattan apartment building during the time their owners leave them
alone. Max (Louis) is a rather spoilt terrier who starts to find himself
neglected when his owner Katie (Kemper) brings home Duke (Stonestreet),
a mongrel, from a dog pound. However the two dogs must put their
rivalry behind them when they are captured by Snowball (Hart) a rabbit
and an army of abandoned pets who are trying to get back at all happily
owned pets and their owners. This is a delightful and energetic
animation movie that is inoffensive and fun for all, young and old.