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 great period for new releases as we have nine fresh films making their way to local cinemas. There is drama with A Bigger Splash (15) and Trumble (15); mystery with Exposed (15); and action represented by London Has Fallen (15) and The Divergent Series: Allegiant. Comedy comes with Hail Caesar! (12A); family animation with Kung Fu Panda 3 (PG); a musical documentary with Janis: Little Girl Blues (15) and horror in The Other Side of the Door (15).

This period sees the disappearance of Creed; Dirty Grandpa; The Hateful Eight and The Revenant. However Carol has made a return, along with the family animation Jungle Shuffle.

Adult comedy continues to be well represented with Dad’s Army; Daddy’s Home, the spy spoof Grimsby; the romance How to be Single and Zoolander 2. For family entertainment there is Alvin & the Chipmunks: The Road Chip; Snoopy and Charlie Brown: The Peanuts Movie; Kiki’s Delivery Services and the excellent Kung Fu Panda 3.

Drama comes with Exposed; London has Fallen; Spotlight; The Finest Hours and Triple 9.

There are two documentaries during the period. The life of Janice Joplin in Janis: Little Girl Blues and a selection of archive footage of Suffragettes in Make More Noise! Suffragettes in Silent Film.

We have three horror films at the moment with The Forest; The Other Side of the Door and the family oriented Goosebumps. In addition Pride and Prejudice and Zombies serves up horror with a good slice of humour. Science fiction is represented by Deadpool; Star Wars: the Force Awakens and The Divergent Series: Allegiant.

Reviews

Dad’s Army

Director: Oliver Parker

Certificate: PG

Cast includes: Michael Gambon, Bill Nighy, Toby Jones, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Blake Harrison

After some fifty years, the famous Dads army TV sitcom makes it to the
big screen. It is 1944 and the end of the second world war is in sight.
Morale in the Walmington-on-Sea Home Guard is low until Rose Winters
(Zeta-Jones) a glamorous journalist, arrives to report on the exploits
of Mainwaring (Jones) and his platoon. In addition evidence is
uncovered of a local German spy who must be caught. The movie makes
references to the original series and surviving members make a couple of
cameo appearances. This is a very amiable movie, quietly amusing
rather than riotously funny. One is left with the impression that a
star studded cast should have been capable of making something a little
more spectacular.

Daddy’s Home

Director: Sean Anders

Certificate: 12A

Cast Includes: Will Ferrell, Mark Wahlberg, Linda Cardellini

A comedy. Conservative radio executive Brad (Ferrell) marries Sarah
(Cardellini) and tries to be a good step dad to her two children.
However his wife’s charismatic and musclebound former husband Dusty
(Wahlberg) comes for an extended visit. Brad finds he must now compete
with their real father for the affection of his step children. There is
a real on-screen chemistry between Ferrell and Wahlberg as they vie
with each other and this provides plenty of opportunity for gags and
comedy set pieces. However some of the gags are rather predictable
leaving a film that is genuinely funny but seldom hilarious.

Deadpool

Director: Tim Miller

Certificate: 15

Cast includes: Ryan Reynolds, T L Miller, Morena Baccarin

Another Marvel comic super-hero makes the big screen. Wade Wilson
(Reynolds), a mercenary, is diagnosed with cancer. He agrees to take
part in an experimental cure and this gives him super powers but leaves
him disfigured. He escapes from the laboratory but feels he can no
longer return to his girlfriend and his previous life. Taking advice
from his best friend Weasel (Miller), he decides to become a masked
vigilante and subsequently is invited to join the X-Men. He finds that
his girlfriend Vanessa (Baccarin) has been kidnapped and so seeks her
safety and his revenge. Made on a low budget, this is an enjoyable
movie. It makes fun of the super-hero movie genre and does not take
itself very seriously. Full of wise cracks, one liners and excessive
violence this is still a very entertaining film.

London Has Fallen

Director: Babak Najafi

Certificate: 15

Cast includes: Aaron Eckhard, Gerard Butler, Morgan Freeman, Charlotte Riley

The UK prime minister has died in mysterious circumstances. A state
funeral is held and the leaders of the western world attend. However
the event is exploited by terrorists, who have infiltrated the British
Secret Service, intent on killing the leaders and devastating London.
Working to thwart the plot is the US President Benjamin Asher (Eckhart),
a US agent Mike Banning (Butler) the American vice president Allan
Trumbull (Freeman) and a British MI6 agent Jacquelin Marshall (Riley).
The president gets stranded in the London streets and Banning has to
battle the terrorists to escort him to the US Embassy. This is a sequel
to the hit movie ‘Olympus has Fallen’ and it follows a similar format.
There are some very good set pieces in the film and footage of many of
the London landmarks coming under attack. For this reviewer it did’t
quite have the magic of the original, but it is a competent and
entertaining film nevertheless.

Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Director: J J Abrams

Certificate: 12A

Cast includes: Harrison Ford, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Carrie Fisher, Adam Driver.

The movie is set some thirty years after ‘The Return of the Jedi’. The
power vacuum left after the Empire was vanquished has been filled by
the ‘First Order’ who start to control the galaxy with their
stormtroopers. The movie tells of the adventures of Han Solo (Ford),
Chewbacca and Princess (now General) Leia (Fisher) as they join new
characters including Rey (Ridley), a scavenger, Finn (Boyega) a First
Order Conscript and a spherical droid BB-8 as they battle the First
Order led by the ominous Kylo Ren (Driver). This movie follows the
style of the first star wars trilogy and, for this reviewer, was much
better than the prequels. Old characters make a welcome appearance to
supplement the newer heroes and villains. An excellent movie in all
respects and the best Star Wars yet.

The Danish Girl

Director: Tom Hooper

Certificate: 15

Cast includes: Eddie Redmayne, Alicia Vikander, Ben Whishaw

The film is based on a novel by David Ebershoff and inspired by
the lives of Dutch artists Lili Elbe/Einar Wegener (Redmayne) and Gerda
Wegener (Vikander). Set in the mid 1920’s Geida is a portrait painter,
but a sitter is late for an appointment. Hence Geida gets her husband
Einar to stand in for the missing female sitter. This has consequences.
Einar has been harbouring a drive to become a female and the finished
portrait attracts favourable attention from art dealers. Einar decides
to become his alter ego Lili Elbe and becomes one of the first people to
received a surgical sex realignment procedure to change from a man to a
woman. The movie follows both the artists as they come to terms with
the change from Einar to Lili. A serious movie, well acted and well
received that highlights the issues of gender reassignment.

The Forest

Director: Jason Zada

Certificate: 15

Cast includes: Natalie Dormer, Taylor Kinney

Sara Price (Dormer) learns that her identical twin sister Jess is
missing after heading into the Aokigahara Forest in Japan. The forest
is infamous for the number of suicides that occur there and rumoured to
be haunted by restless spirits. Sara heads to Japan where she teams up
with travel reporter Aiden (Kinney) and together they enter the forest.
Here they find a tent belonging to Jess and so stay the night. This is
when the hallucinations and the violence begins. Dormer gives a good
performance playing both of the sisters and the director has tried the
novel approach of building tension without too many shocks. This makes
for a frightening and entertaining film, thought the lack of real shocks
explains why it has received some rather poor reviews.

The Other Side of the Door

Director: Johannes Robert

Certificate: 15

Cast includes: Logan Creran, Sarah Wayne Callies, Jeremy Sisto, Sofia Rosinsky

Maria (Collies) and Michael (Sisto) are in India when tragedy strikes
with the death of their son Olivier (Creran). Maria is distraught,
causing her housekeeper to reveal there is a way for her to say one
final goodbye to her dead son. This involves visiting an ancient temple
where, for one time only, she will be able to communicate with her son
through the closed temple door. Maria goes, but breaks a fundamental
rule, causing her to open the door between the worlds of the living and
the dead. This results in the family becoming the victim of a haunting.
The movie is filmed in India and incorporates some hindu mysticism.
The premise of the film is rather original, though the treatment of the
subsequent events does not break any new ground. A solid horror movie.