Robbie Collin
Select another critic »For 1,122 reviews, this critic has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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44% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.5 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Robbie Collin's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Sentimental Value | |
| Lowest review score: | Christmas Karma | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 601 out of 1122
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Mixed: 424 out of 1122
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Negative: 97 out of 1122
1122
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Robbie Collin
You miss the lingering after-sting of catharsis that was a regular signature of Lumet’s work, but in the heat of the moment, Money Monster’s bluster and nerve keeps you hooked.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 12, 2016
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- The Telegraph
- Posted May 11, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
In a golden period for both animation and children’s filmmaking, here is a head-splitting reminder of just how bad those two things can get.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 28, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
At the root of that is Civil War’s greatest strength – and the reason it makes all thought of the recent Batman v Superman debacle evaporate on contact. The Russos’ film has an unshakeable faith in these decades-old characters: they’re not wrangled into standing for anything other than who they are, with no gloss or reinterpretation or reach for epic significance required. This is the cinematic superhero showdown you’ve dreamt of since childhood, precisely because that’s everything – and all – it wants to be.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 20, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
It’s a welcome surprise: sharper and funnier than its doom-laden predecessor, with a fantasy setting immersive enough to distract from the narrative’s various chips and cracks.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 18, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
“Everyone is looking all the time; you just have to train yourself to look harder,” Hockney explains. This warm, affectionate, perceptive film makes looking harder look easy.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 18, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
The tone is almost identical to the Horrible Histories television series, albeit very slightly fruitier, with jokes that should play just as well to intelligent children and immature adults.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 14, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
Favreau’s film is a sincere and full-hearted adaptation that returns to Kipling for fresh inspiration, but also knows which elements of the animation are basically now gospel, and comes up with a respectful reconciliation of the two.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 3, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
The film’s slightly feeble and teenage ideas about what counts as transgressive quickly drain these outpourings of their capacity to shock.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 29, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
The film has a scrappy optimism about it that’s often very winning, but it never draws itself up to its full height.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 28, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
Hawke expertly captures Baker’s angular fragility, both in his languidly crumpled face and his voice.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 24, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
No major blockbuster in years has been this incoherently structured, this seemingly uninterested in telling a story with clarity and purpose.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 22, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
Most of the film takes place in this vacuum-packed, Sartrean hell of other people, which Trachtenberg, his cast, writers and crew evoke with chest-tightening efficiency. Every sound and line rings with a tight, tinny echo; every room is felt out to its corners; every knick-knack drily noted.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 8, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
Like the earlier Divergent films, Allegiant is studded with enticing science-fiction ideas, but it keeps such a poker-straight face while presenting them, you often can’t help but crack up.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 8, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
No director working today can carry out this kind of heavyweight emotional excavation with such feather-light flicks of his trowel. That’s Hong’s gift, as counterintuitive as it is unique: he makes molehills out of mountains.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 3, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
Carlyle shoots the story with a propulsive, page-turning energy that’s enjoyably at odds with the Glasgow backdrop, which is dilapidated to the point of timelessness.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 23, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
Grimsby doesn’t ever wound quite as devastatingly as Borat or Brüno, but it’s a vital, lavish, venomously profane two fingers up at Benefits Street pity porn and the social division it fosters. I laughed, winced, gagged, then laughed even more.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 23, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
It's an accomplished disappointment: the zealous cast, surplus of attitude and sinewy set pieces never quite compensate for the thinly sketched characters, unfocused plot and general gnawing sense of potential not being met.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 20, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
The fourth-wall-smashing is fun in a Ferris Bueller kind of way, but it’s never pulled off with the devious panache of Blazing Saddles, let alone Funny Games or Hellzapoppin’. Since it's this stuff, rather than the ongoing thud-thud-thud of bad language and gore, that feels mould-breaking, it’s a pity Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick’s screenplay doesn’t have the courage to experiment a little more.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 6, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
Dad’s Army bleakly suggests that even the best source material in the world can only take you so far.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 3, 2016
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- Robbie Collin
The film unquestionably dices with slightness. But you don’t leave the cinema feeling that something was missing, and Tomlin, who appears in every scene, constructs a persuasive and highly watchable character.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 17, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Sisters is entertaining as far as it goes, but it only occasionally feels like it’s going far enough.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 17, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
While there’s nothing here to remotely trouble young minds, there’s nothing much to stick in them either. For the most part, the film just seems to waft along, and though Charlie Brown's life is low-key by nature, the stories are mostly flimsily low-impact.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 17, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The Hateful Eight is a parlour-room epic, an entire nation in a single room, a film steeped in its own filminess but at the same time vital, riveting and real.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 16, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
From the off, JJ Abrams’s film sets out to shake Star Wars from its slumber, and reconnect the series with its much-pined-for past. That it achieves this both immediately and joyously is perhaps the single greatest relief of the movie-going year.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 16, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Though it delves into the worst extremes of human ugliness, German’s film is exhilarating, moving, funny, beautiful and unshakeable – a danse macabre that whirls you round and round until the bitter end.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 13, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Since Joy is a David O. Russell film, the presence of a) Lawrence and b) bizarre, fizz-popping explosions of catharsis are to be expected. But the ringmaster of The Fighter, Silver Linings Playbook and American Hustle seems to have mellowed a little, which means fewer outright belly laughs, but a more layered and involving emotional landscape.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 7, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
I’m not sure The Revenant is quite as tough and uncompromising as it thinks it is: it's coffee-table existentialism, with psychological brush-strokes so thick they might as well have been put on with a mop. But there’s no question it’s an extraordinary, blood-summoning, sinew-stiffening ride.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 4, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Of course it’s lightweight, bordering on disposable.... But it’s also genuinely warm-spirited, with three lovable central performances from Gadon, Powley and Reynor- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 24, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It makes you wince at the fragility of life while simultaneously welling up at the wonder of it – and that unexpected mixing of the sentimental and the existential left me feeling what can only be described as aww-struck.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 23, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Despite its well-worn ideas and themes, Gary Ross’s provocative, pulse-surgingly tense adaptation couldn’t feel fresher, or timelier.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 20, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
After the subterranean sluggishness of the last film, too thinly spun out from the first third of Suzanne Collins’s final book, Mockingjay – Part 2 returns the series to its characteristic high gear.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 17, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It radiates a candour, immediacy and tongue-scalding sex appeal that a bigger budget would have only smothered.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 15, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Mendes...lets the quieter moments breathe.... But Mendes is rather good at being loud, too, and his nine times Oscar-nominated cinematographer Roger Deakins makes the wildly ambitious action sequences the most beautiful in Bond’s 50-year career.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
His recollections are as sobering as his images, and a great many of both will embed themselves in your head.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 29, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Amenábar is no stranger to psychologically vivid thrillers with ghostly overtones, but Regression feels depressingly like journeyman work.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 27, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Faulkner’s book, an oblique and complex tale of the American South’s festering decline, hasn’t so much been reworked for cinema as simply dumped on the screen in handfuls, and the result is a swirling mess.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 21, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Its sombre sincerity and hypnotic, treasure-box beauty make Crimson Peak feel like a film out of time – but Del Toro, his cast and his crew carry it off without a single postmodern prod or smirk. The film wears its heart on its sleeve, along with its soul and most of its intestines.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 16, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
This is a handsome and mature entertainment, rich with novelistic intrigue, that asks for very little in exchange for its rewards.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 14, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It’s written, shot and acted with a hot-blooded urgency that reminds you the struggle it depicts is an ongoing one – and which shakes up this most well-behaved of genres with a surge of civil disobedience.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 12, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Zemeckis turns the event into a kind of blockbuster Cinéma Pur – an almost avant-garde game of composition, movement and perspective, exhilaratingly attuned to form and space. ("Mad Max": Fury Road did the same.) The camerawork is subtle and meticulous, the 3D head-spinningly well-applied.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 26, 2015
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 22, 2015
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 22, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Occasionally things get a little overcrowded, particularly during a sticky final act, but Pan has a certain timeless buoyancy that keeps it bouncing back.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 21, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Egoyan, working from a script by first-time screenwriter Benjamin August, works hard to steer the premise away from crassness – and in Plummer, he’s blessed with a lead actor who can express Zev’s interior struggle with delicacy and dignified understatement.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 19, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It’s a chewy watch, heavy on the socio-political carbs, and its method can be a little exhausting. But its determination to do right by its subject – and Gitai’s own country too – is soberly compelling.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 19, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The mood’s often as fun as it is funereal, and though the film occasionally feels clever in a way that isn’t necessarily a compliment, Sokurov’s ideas have a philosophical depth and richness that are found almost nowhere else in cinema.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 19, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Effortless tracking shots, spasms of sickening violence and a perfectly pitched jukebox soundtrack are all conspicuously and stylishly deployed, sometimes all at once.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 18, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It’s a film of strange and moonlit beauty, and touches you like an icy whisper on the back of your neck.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 18, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The film has so little to say about forbidden love, and gives its stars so little dramatic sinew to flex, that it already feels like a footnote in the genre.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 12, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
In the dramatic stakes, the dining table comes a distant second to the swimming pool: a place to undress, bask, flirt, vie for attention, compete, cool off and burn. It’s a shimmering tank of romance, jealously and intrigue, and A Bigger Splash plunges into the deep end.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 12, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Kaufman and Johnson tease out the possible causes and effects of Michael’s crisis with great imagination, tilting your sympathies so subtly as they do so that you don’t even feel it going on.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 12, 2015
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 5, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It’s hard to shake the suspicion that Depp is playing a type – almost as if he’s trying to replicate the kind of performance Nicholson might have given in the same role. You long for him to roll his sleeves up and grasp the character’s shape and soul himself, ideally without the aid of those distracting prosthetics.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 4, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
There’s no tidy moral to take away, because a story like this shouldn’t end in comfort. Instead, your skin’s left prickling by its deft deconstruction of the business of secret-keeping, and its perceptive setting out of the courage and diligence it takes to overturn it.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 3, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The film can get so emotionally and spiritually punishing that it needs Elba’s industrial magnetism to keep you on side. And vile as the Commandant may be, he’s a strong showcase for the actor’s talents.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 3, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The hardship of the trek is vividly and stomach-lurchingly portrayed, particularly when the storm sets in, but it never makes the crucial leap from the screen into your bones.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 2, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It’s not bad so much as lightly feeble – and Pegg acquits himself respectably in a lead role that, for a change, chimes well to his best comic persona: the beta male under alpha pressure.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 13, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
If Sandler can’t find it in himself to be verbally or physically entertaining on set, you start to wonder why he’s there in the first place, although his hollow stare in a number of scenes suggests he may be pondering the same thing.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 13, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It succeeds admirably on its own terms – more so, I think, than his two Sherlock Holmes films – and while it never really transcends pastiche, its ambitions don’t lie in that direction.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 11, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The film is almost all build-up, though any mounting sense of excitement is dispelled by the monotonously downbeat tone and the cast’s conspicuous lack of chemistry. Nobody looks like they’re having fun, and the gloom is infectious.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 6, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Its fuse fizzes dutifully from A to B, but the dynamite never ignites.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 24, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
What we’ve seen since the beginnings of the Marvel serial in 2008 is an ongoing stretching: bigger casts, grander set-pieces and more intricate interplay between characters, with no clear end in sight. Ant-Man scuttles off in the other direction. Brisk humour, keenly felt dramatic stakes, and invention over scale. You know: small pleasures.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 8, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
If every last joke in it wasn’t built on the premise that anyone who isn’t a straight, white, able-bodied, middle-class male isn’t intrinsically laughable, it might have made for lively comedy.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 6, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
In practice, the interplay between events old and new is equal parts tedious and indecipherable, with the characters talking about parallel timelines like studio executives thrashing out a franchise in a boardroom.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 30, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
What’s surprising about Minions is that it squanders these yellow oddballs’ new-found freedom.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 24, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Two decades after dinosaurs ruled the Earth’s cinemas, are we still capable of putting our phones away for two hours and being honestly amazed by them, without a glaze of cynicism or irony to keep us stuck? Trevorrow, his cast and crew would clearly like to think so. And in light of their efforts, you’d have to grinningly agree.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 10, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Perry somehow allows his cast enough space in this meticulously authored environment to work creative wonders of their own.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 4, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
You just have to watch it, then grab a net and try to coax your soul back down from the ceiling.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 2, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
You see San Francisco and Los Angeles falling apart very loudly and dangerously, and in great computer-generated detail. But there’s nothing memorable or beautiful about the carnage; no specific moments to replay in your head once the film is over.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 27, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Silk curtains flutter and fall, candles glow, fires crackle softly in the grate. Every scene, every shot, has been composed with total, Kubrickian precision, and calibrated for maximum, breath-quickening impact.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 24, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The demented brilliance of Miike’s film lies in the director’s ability to craft ideas that are simultaneously sublime and ridiculous.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 24, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Its generation-spanning story has serious power, and, in its masterful opening chapter and final sequence, brushes against greatness.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 24, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Justin Kurzel’s blistering, blood-sticky new screen version of Macbeth unseams the famous Shakespearean tragedy open from the nave to the chops, letting its insides spill out across the rock underfoot.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 24, 2015
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- The Telegraph
- Posted May 23, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
There are lightning-flashes of pure, ornamental brilliance throughout Paolo Sorrentino’s Youth, although there’s not much happening on the landscape they illuminate.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 23, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
When the film gets going, it’s hard not to be bustled along with it, thanks mostly to León de Aranoa’s talent for punchy comic dialogue – doubly impressive, given this is his first English-language picture – and the plot’s habit of thwarting your expectations as to where the most morally upstanding course of action might lead.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 22, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The film feels like a personal project for Portman, but thankfully never a vanity one. It’s a fine piece of work – and you sense there’s better to come.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 22, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
So if the sex is such a ball, what’s wrong with Love? The answer, unfortunately, is absolutely everything else, of which there’s more than you might initially expect.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 21, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
This is the same wondrous journey on which Apichatpong sends his audience: inwards and downwards, to a place where the simplest rhythms of everyday life become hallowed and mythic.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 20, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Tale of Tales dances on a razor’s edge between funny and unnerving, with sequences of shadow-spun horror rubbing up against moments of searing baroque beauty. The result is a fabulously sexy, defiantly unfashionable readymade cult item.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 18, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Girlhood carries you along with its characters, neither lionising nor demonising them, but allowing you to watch them live their lives and make their own decisions, be they rash or inspired or a terrifying mixture of the two.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 18, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
This is a humane and heart-wrenchingly beautiful film from Docter; even measured alongside Pixar’s numerous great pictures, it stands out as one of the studio’s very best.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 18, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Kapadia’s film is many things: a Sherlockian reconstruction of Winehouse’s arcing path across the skies of superstardom, a commemoration of her colossal talent, and a moving tribute to a brilliant, witty, vivacious young woman gone far too soon. But above all, it’s a perceptive examination of the singer’s need for love – from her friends, family, colleagues, husband and public – and the ways in which that need went unmet, or was exploited, at the times it ached in her the most.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 17, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Every frame has been composed with cerebral coolness, and the hotel and its surrounding forests are shot with a dream-like lucidity. I haven’t seen anything quite like it before, and I’m still not sure that I have even now. This is the kind of film you have to go back to and check it really happened.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 16, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The world of Mad Max has always been welded together from bits of whatever was lying around, and the films’ brilliance has always been in their welding – the ingenious ways in which their scrap-metal parts were combined to create something unthinkable, hilarious or obscene, and often all three.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 11, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It’s a wholly respectable adaptation, though perhaps a flash or two more of wildness wouldn’t have gone amiss.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 1, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It’s the interplay between the film’s many different characters, rather than the blow-up-the-world crisis they’re trying to defuse, that keeps you on the edge of your seat.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 21, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
When it finally gets going, it becomes gloweringly compelling, shored up by its strong supporting players (Paddy Considine, Vincent Cassel and Charles Dance also pop up), handsome photography and sheer, clanking momentum.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 17, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It’s not that the film is particularly loathsome, or that Blart is an overweeningly horrible character. What rankles is that he’s barely anything at all; a stereotype of a stereotype; a half-remembered punchline; a stomach with a moustache and wheels. As you watch the film, it’s already forgotten.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 13, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The film doesn’t look like the future, or the past’s idea of the future, or anything other than a venal cash grab.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 9, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
That strange, conflicted tone of "operatic realism" that the critic and essayist Phillip Lopate found in the films of Luchino Visconti also runs through the core of Munzi’s film: there’s an almost theatrical grandeur to the plot, which was adapted from a novel by Gioacchino Criaco, but moment-to-moment it zings with realism.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 7, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Seventh Son would hardly be the first film to use "strong female characters" as a means of waving its misogyny under the radar, but it’s seldom carried off as depressingly as this.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The film moves like a pyjama case full of angry weasels, and finds ingenious ways to cram every scene with just one more loopy, disposable gag or slapstick thwack. It may not be the year’s best animated film, but it’s almost certainly the most.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
I’ve always enjoyed the idea of the Fast & Furious films more than their execution, but this feels like the series’ strongest, even though some of its action sequences are so muddled they can barely walk straight.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 25, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The film’s secret isn’t much of a secret at all. It just remembers why Neeson was such an oddly inspired choice for a grimy revenge thriller back in 2008 and does its best to repeat the trick.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 12, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It plays like a listless mash-up of every Young Adult franchise movie you’ve ever seen – domineering rulers, anguished, system-smashing teens, and all the purposeful striding through rubble you can handle.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 12, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Woodley is the teen angst poster girl de nos jours, but this performance is subtler and richer than any other she’s given to date.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 5, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Mawkishness, gay panic, and lazy jokes make Vince Vaughn's workplace comedy considerably less fun than work itself.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 5, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It’s a brawny, inventive action romp that’s as happy firing rockets at helicopters as it is contemplating the Cartesian model of mind-body dualism, which gives it a satisfying, sweet-and-sour tang of its own.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 5, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Smith makes Nicky too obviously insincere, with a grating, gloomy edge – which means he never suckers you in, and the fun dries up before it ever starts.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 26, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
In this wildly promising debut feature from the 36-year-old British filmmaker Daniel Wolfe, the landscape becomes a kind of holy sanctuary for two young lovers fleeing a murderous plot.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 23, 2015
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 19, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
[Sachs'] subtle, often quite special film shows us a shared life as a series of impositions: sometimes we’re imposed upon, and sometimes we do the imposing, and love is the net result.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 18, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
We all know Smith can deliver barbs like blow-darts, but Parker’s screenplay gives her a too-rare chance to do something more – and when she delivers a bittersweet, profound monologue towards the end of the film, it feels like you’re watching a classic Ferrari reach the end of an average speed check zone and whistle off into the distance.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 18, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Cinema-goers desperately need a fresh, unusual and franchise-free blockbuster to rally behind, but Jupiter Ascending isn’t it.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 11, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
It bombards you with overwritten monologues and try-hard music cues in an attempt to drown out its dramatic shortcomings.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 29, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
The wonder of stop-motion is the mountain of effort required to achieve even the smallest movement. The charm of Shaun the Sheep is that you don’t notice it for a moment.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 26, 2015
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 22, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
This is bewitchingly smart science fiction of a type that’s all too rare. Its intelligence is anything but artificial.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 21, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Eastwood doesn’t care about the legend. Instead, he shows us Kyle much as he saw his targets: with that strange combination of extreme intimacy and extreme remove that a long-range sight confers.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 14, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Each individual moment in the film barely seems to be on speaking terms with the rest.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 6, 2015
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- Robbie Collin
Every punchline is followed by a quiet pause for audience laughter, the lengths of which might kindly be described as optimistic.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 18, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The third Night at the Museum film starts strongly, with its heart in the past... It’s an exciting opening, and perhaps too exciting for the film’s own good. It’s hard not to be disappointed when the plot moves back to the present and settles into the time-honoured formula of digitised creatures running riot and famous people in fancy dress doing shtick.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 18, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The film is a whirl of pure pleasure that just keeps whirling: Sondheim doesn’t write show-stoppers but show-surgers, and from the moment the glorious opening number whips up, introducing the central players, the film cartwheels onwards until it lands at its unexpected but quite beautiful happy-ever-after.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 17, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 12, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
This is bold and uncompromising stuff from Scott; a Biblical epic to shake your faith in the order of things, not reaffirm it.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 29, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Farhadi’s films are like moral whodunits, and as Sepideh and her friends gradually unearth the truth, he expertly buffets our sympathies in all directions until the very last shot.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 21, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Serious as Paddington is about meaning something, it’s even more serious about the business of having fun.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 19, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
There’s no question The Rewrite is underpinned by the same story mechanisms it draws attention to... But there are moments here when sunlight breaks through the shtick.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 15, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Mockingjay – Part 1 is all queue, no roller-coaster. The third of four films in the successful and admirable Hunger Games series is any number of good things: intense, stylish, topical, well-acted. But the one thing it could never be called is satisfying.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 10, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 8, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Nothing here is raw enough for the strength of the brothers’ bond and the weight of their sacrifice to really bite.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 28, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 27, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
A melding of old and new modes of animation, in which the attentive artistry of the past coexists with the hyper-detailed, computer-generated present.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 23, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Any Hollywood gloss has been scoured away: the plot is raw, episodic and wholly unsentimental; a gruelling onward rumble from one brush with death to the next.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 10, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The film is stupendous: as antic as Boogie Nights and Punch-Drunk Love, but with The Master and There Will Be Blood’s uncanny feel for the swell and ebb of history.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 4, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
In a memorably bad summer for children’s films, this, surely, is as low as things can sink.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 22, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
For all its simmering malice and buried secrets, it’s worth remembering that this is David Fincher in fun mode: unnerving, shocking and provoking for better and for worse, in sickness and in health, but mostly sickness.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 22, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Ferrara has come up with something pretty special here: a subtle, seductive, lamp-lit hymn to one artist’s talents from another in the process of rediscovering his own.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 14, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
A searching, timely drama about the dehumanising effects of waging war at a distance.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 13, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Strickland has made something uniquely sexy and strange, built on two tremendous central performances and a bone-deep understanding of cinema’s magic and mechanisms.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 13, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 12, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 5, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 5, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The Humbling, which was directed by Barry Levinson (Good Morning, Vietnam, Rain Man) and based on a novel by Philip Roth, is such inept, shuffling nonsense that an apter title might have been The Bumbling.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 5, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
As supposedly taboo-smashing comedy, it’s never on full thrust, settling more for tentative gags with underwear firmly in place.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 4, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
This script has not exactly been laboured over into the wee hours, and an audience used to Disney and Pixar will rightly expect better than this, whether they’re under 10 or not.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 3, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
It’s a hysterical screwball fantasia that openly steals from Lubitsch, Hawks, Capra and Sturges and wants to be caught with its fingers in the till. The result is a highly-sexed Jenga-pile of silliness, to which Bogdanovich can’t resist adding block after teetering block.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 2, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 31, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
This is an essential companion piece to Oppenheimer’s earlier film; another astonishing heart-of-darkness voyage into the jungle of human nature.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 28, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Spectacular, star-powered cinema that makes us ask anew what cinema is for. Call it a "Dark Knight" of the soul.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 27, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Perhaps the biggest compliment you could pay the film, apart from that it’s by and large hysterically funny, is that it is unmistakably film-like, with a smoothly arcing plot and gross-out moments staged with the verve and ceremony of an action-movie set-piece.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 25, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Emotions and moods are anchored to specific moments of stillness, and we feel them all the more intensely because of it.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 22, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Sin City 2 glowers and sulks and is determined to show you the best bad time you’ve had in years. It’s neither high art nor noir, but it’s what a Sin City film should be.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 20, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Metro Manila is so spellbound by its setting that it is a good hour before we discover what kind of film it is going to be. It begins as a swirling drama of survival in the Filipino capital — but then suddenly it slips off down an alleyway, only to emerge a scrupulously engineered, Christopher Nolan-ish crime thriller.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 18, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
What distinguishes the film from last year’s backpacking adventure, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, apart from its lobotomised worldview and charred, corroded soul, are Hector’s philosophical musings – “people who are afraid of death are afraid of life,” is one – that pop up on screen in a handwritten font whenever a lesson has been learnt.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 14, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
You can’t help but wonder if some important people in boardrooms watched the last two Expendables films and, between sips of mineral water, diligently noted all the ways in which the third might be made slicker and more polished, without realising the franchise’s doughy unslickness was the wellspring of its charm.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 4, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The fun of it – and Guardians of the Galaxy specialises in fun, served by the sugar-sprinkled ice-cream-scoopload – is in seeing this odd quintet bluster through space battles and alien brawls that would have defeated anyone smarter and better-equipped. Just as the team makes do with the junk they find around them, the film feels like a mound of gems culled from decades of pop-culture scavenging.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 24, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Transformers has ambition and attitude in its pores, and spectacle to spare. Bay shoots cars like they’re women, and people like they’re cars, and tosses around metal like it’s made from thin air. The film wasn’t meant to make you think, but it does. For better or worse, it’s cinema.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 30, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Rather than do something freshly cinematic with Saint Laurent’s precise, elegant creations, the film is content to exhibit them.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 23, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Rather than embracing the jangling song-and-dance numbers that made the live version box-office catnip, Eastwood sheepishly tidies them into the background, treating the project instead like a standard music-industry biopic.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 19, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Like one of its animated 3D asides, the film jumps out at you, twiddles around and then folds itself away into nowhere. It’s all pop-up, no book.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 18, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Woodley and Dern breathe a ghost into the machine. Willem Dafoe has fun, albeit not too much, in a brief, vital role as a creepy writer. Most crucially, the words that survived from Green’s novel did so for a reason.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 17, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Hogg withholds the specifics, and lets you decode things for yourself. Her camera rarely moves, but every shot is composed with total artistry, building to a final image that’s somehow both joyful and devastating.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 17, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The action sequences are executed with rhythm and punch, and our heroine swoops and swirls around like Iron Man in a sheath dress. Maleficent may be short on true enchantment, but until we find a superhero who can pull off a black silk cocktail gown in battle, she’s very welcome.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 27, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
You can sense what Dahan’s aiming at: by introducing the spectre of Hitch early on, he lays out Grace’s existence as a kind of lived-in Hitchcock thriller... But the acting is so heightened, and the script so thoroughly awful, that Dahan’s idea – his big and seemingly only one – can’t begin to stick.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 26, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The result is cinema you don’t watch so much as absent-mindedly scroll through, wondering when an idea or an image worth clicking on will finally show up.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 26, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
This is exasperatingly thin stuff from Loach and Laverty, who have in the past built far more textured narratives, peopled by far richer characters, even while maintaining the fierce, politicised charge they aim for here.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 25, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The mood flits between solemn and rascally, and the pacing is measured: this is storytelling at a mosey rather than a trot.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 25, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
This is a complex, bewitching and melancholy drama, another fearlessly intelligent film from Assayas.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 25, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
For all its visual fizz, Bonello’s film, which he co-wrote with Thomas Bidegain, tells us nothing about the designer save the usual pompous/concessive hero-worship.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 25, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
This is another hugely admirable entry in the Dardenne canon: nothing all that new, perhaps, but as thoughtful, humane and superbly composed as we have, very fortunately, come to expect from them.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 25, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
This is Egoyan’s best film for a very long time: like Reynolds, he needed a hit, and The Captive is a welcome return to the form of The Sweet Hereafter. Its eeriness creeps up on you and taps you on the shoulder, and when you spin around, it’s still behind you.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 25, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
There’s so much in this seething cauldron of a film, so many film-industry neuroses exposed and horrors nested within horrors, that one viewing is too much, and not nearly enough. Cronenberg has made a film that you want to unsee – and then see and unsee again.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 24, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Beyond the troughful of fun tics, Spall makes Turner tenderly and totally human — the effect of which is to make his artistic talents seem even more extraordinary still.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 24, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The film comes and goes without commotion, but its magic settles on you as softly and as steadily as dust.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 24, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted May 24, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Miller finds grand, America-describing themes in the interactions between these three men: the extraordinary influence of inherited wealth, the hunkered-down ambition of working-class athletes, the equation of material success with honour and moral rectitude.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 23, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The action sequences here are armrest-gripping fun, and you only wish DeBlois and his animators had been even more confident; held their shots even longer; allowed us to enjoy the whistle of the wind and the curve of the dragons’ flight paths without hurriedly cutting away to another angle, and another, and another. When the film flies, it soars.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 16, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The film squanders both of its casts, reeling from one fumbled set-piece to the next. It seems to have been constructed in a stupor, and you watch in a daze of future past.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 12, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
A summer blockbuster that’s not just thrilling, but that orchestrates its thrills with such rare diligence, you want to yelp with glee.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 11, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Age of Uprising falls awkwardly (but not altogether unappealingly) into the gap between art film and horse opera.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 6, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Director Camille Delamarre and Luc Besson, who co-wrote the screenplay, relocate the story to Detroit and tone down some of its (admittedly broad) social satire — although the Parkour remains centre-stage, and is mostly hair-raising.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 3, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Anderson’s Pompeii doesn’t sweat the human stuff. His camera is mostly trained on the big picture: billowing smoke, tidal-waves, fireballs streaking through the sky. What’s happening to the people on the ground doesn’t matter, so long as we’re aware that 95 percent of them are being squashed or torched.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 3, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
This jumbled sequel, which was also directed by Carlos Saldanha, loses most of what made the first film such an infectious entertainment.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Aronofsky’s sixth film is not the Noah you know, but a hundred-million-dollar Chinese whisper; a familiar story made newly poetic and strange with a flavour that’s less Genesis than Revelation.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 29, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
You can’t help but feel disappointed that a film with a relatively spicy premise becomes, in the end, so risk-averse.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 20, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Muppet film number eight is a resounding disappointment: it’s uneven and often grating, with only a few moments of authentic delight, and almost none of the sticky-sweet, toast-and-honey crunch of its vastly enjoyable 2011 forerunner.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 12, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
If 300’s human touch largely came down to Butler’s roaring and screaming, it’s left entirely to Green to goose the sequel into life. Happily she obliges.- The Telegraph
- Posted Mar 6, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Guiraudie’s film is acutely brilliant on the funny, scary machinery of desire, and how easily humans can get caught up in its cogwheels.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 26, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The whole thing is so roaringly absurd, and delivered with such hands-clasped sincerity, that the only rational response is to laugh the house down.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 26, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Because genre lets us know roughly what to expect, it can put us at ease, which is the last thing Denis wants to do. So she leaves questions hanging and mysteries unsolved.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 18, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 18, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
Tom Gormican, the writer and director, mostly uses overlapping dialogue in place of actual jokes, although occasionally he stretches to toilet humour.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 6, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
For a shot of pure forward-leaping, backward-dreaming animated pleasure, pick brick.- The Telegraph
- Posted Feb 3, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
There may well be a worse film released this year than this unwatchable British black comedy, although it sets a terrifyingly low benchmark.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 28, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
It’s an astonishing achievement. Linklater and his cast, who helped refine the director’s script, perfectly execute how long it takes us to become the lead characters in our own lives, and how fumblingly the role is first assumed.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 26, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
However genius may flourish, you know it when you see it, and Whiplash is it.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 22, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
The sheer half-heartedness of the whole exercise, though, may still catch you unawares.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 9, 2014
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- Robbie Collin
You’re left wishing that Adler had focused more on the no-win moral tangle of the handler-informant relationship, and less of the mechanics of its execution.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 29, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
After watching Peter Farrelly’s Movie 43, I was immediately overcome with a sudden rush of emotion: not amusement, anger or even mild irritation, but a profound and faintly tragic sense of pity.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 24, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Kore-eda has crafted a piercing, tender poem about the bittersweet ebb and flow of paternal love, and his status as Ozu's heir becomes ever more assured.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 23, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
As hot and wet as freshly butchered meat: every second, every frame of its three-hour running time is virile with a lifetime’s accumulated genius.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 17, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The legend loses something in the retelling, but what’s new here is mostly worth the trip.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 16, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
It is three parts The Mighty Boosh to two parts The Goon Show, which, when mixed with the quite astonishing lack of wit and finesse seen here, makes for pure cinematic strychnine.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 13, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Fill the Void is a real collector’s item: a film in which the forces of religion and tradition are shown to be working together, however haltingly and imperfectly, for the good.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 12, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The second leg of Peter Jackson’s three-part adaptation of The Hobbit, by J. R. R. Tolkien, is mostly stalling for time: two or three truly great sequences tangled up in long beards and longer pit-stops.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 12, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Aharon Keshales and Navot Papushado, the two-man writer-director team, are swinging at serious targets here... But their point soon wears itself out, and what remains is schlock with airs and tired black humour.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 10, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
This is a simple and beautiful journey undertaken purely for its own sake, and approached in that spirit, Tracks will lead you to a place of quiet wonder.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 5, 2013
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 5, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
What gives the film its lip-smacking, chilli-pepper kick is that we are never entirely certain who is conning whom, or even if what we are watching has any truth to it at all.- The Telegraph
- Posted Dec 5, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The 3D photography is shallow and muddy, although a David Attenborough voiceover helps sustain interest.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 29, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
It feels like a film that is attracted by the shape of love and pain, but is a long way from understanding the content.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 20, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
For all its innovativeness, Everyday has the rhythms and intrigue of a not-very-interesting family’s Christmas letters.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 12, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
It’s a critic’s instinct to auto-praise any blockbuster that tries to do something different, but Catching Fire is so committed to carrying on the fine work started by its predecessor that the applause flows utterly naturally.- The Telegraph
- Posted Nov 12, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
It feels entirely made by committee – the definition of house style, without a personal stamp in sight.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 22, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Wright’s inkily beautiful, imaginatively structured picture - drama bleeds into newsreel and archive footage - is another excellent new film about the strange ways British landscapes (and here, seascapes) work on British minds.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 4, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Tonally the film is all over the rink, but it leaves you more convinced and entertained than you’d expect.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 4, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
I loved every minute of Filth, and couldn’t have stomached another second of it.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 4, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Maggie Carey, the writer and director, has plenty to say about life on the cusp of womanhood, but never quite works out a way to make her points without getting her characters to recite them verbatim.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 4, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The slotting together of songs and plot is often done with a spark of inspiration.- The Telegraph
- Posted Oct 1, 2013
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Morris gives it the old college try, but Rumsfeld is too smooth an operator to let anything slip.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
If you are asking an audience to listen to one man talking for an hour and a half, you had better make sure he is worth listening to, and minute-by-minute, Hardy has you spellbound.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The film leaves you enlightened and disillusioned, but still furious at Armstrong, who seems to have drawn the conclusion that he is now a tragic hero.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Glazer’s astonishing film takes you to a place where the everyday becomes suddenly strange, and fear and seduction become one and the same.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Raucous but fatally confused, openly pilfering its central themes from Gilliam’s own 1985 masterpiece Brazil, but with no idea how to develop them.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Every shot of Stray Dogs has been built with utter formal mastery; every sequence exerts an almost telepathic grip.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
This is a heartbreaking story – how could it not be? But Frears’ film breaks your heart and then repairs it.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Oswald’s brother Robert, played by James Badge Dale, is the film’s only rational human being, and Dale makes you wish Landesman had written the entire film from his angle.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
This is mesmerically assured and tensile film-making, with two complex and plausible performances at its core, and the shin-stinging kick of a Chaucerian moral fable.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Kim rattles you with this family’s bizarre and pitiful plight, and only then, from a place of agonised discomfort, does the laughter follow, in great whoops and roars.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Joe represents a return to the independent-spirited storytelling that characterised Green’s early career.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The scares are mostly very scary indeed, and that means the film does its job.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 12, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
There are visual flights of fancy here as glorious as anything Miyazaki’s studio has created, but the story is rooted in a country trudging towards its own destruction.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 11, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Unlike Walter Salles’s recent adaptation of On The Road, which embraced the Beat philosophy with a wide and credulous grin, Kill Your Darlings is inquisitive about the movement’s worth, and the genius of its characters is never assumed.- The Telegraph
- Posted Sep 6, 2013
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 28, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The key to the film’s success, and the reason it often left me hooting with laughter, is Aniston, and her character’s struggle in vain to maintain her sweetheart persona.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Vogt-Roberts manages the neat trick of making his film feel both nostalgic and current.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
In lesser hands, Elysium might have played like a Lib Dem manifesto with extra spaceships, but the South African filmmaker wants to explore ideas, not wave placards, and whether or not you agree with the film’s politics, the fire in its belly is catching.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The plot is an incomprehensible tangle of dead ends and recaps.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 21, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Spurlock himself is nowhere to be seen, perhaps because the man in charge of this film is plainly Cowell himself, whose influence hangs over the picture like the smell of a leaky bin bag.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 20, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Modest as it may look, this is boundary-pushing cinema in all the best ways, and what a thrill it is to hear those boundaries creak.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 20, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
About Time is itself a film less directed than quilted: it’s a feathery old patchwork under which you might snuggle at the end of a tiring week.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 15, 2013
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 15, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
DisneyToon Studios have borrowed so much from Pixar here, and yet they seem to have learned almost nothing.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 15, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Could this be the late-emerging hit movie of summer 2013? No chance, although if this was August 1987, a time when we allowed action films to be smart on their own dumb terms, it might have cleaned up.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 15, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
This is cinema as decathlon – a string of tribulations to sap your stamina and make your ligaments burn.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 14, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Your ass is constantly braced in readiness and hope, but it remains un-kicked.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 13, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Holiff assembled this memoir from his father’s papers and audio diary, although the portrait of Cash that emerges is that of a pill-popping religious nut, and there is next to no insight into his music or creative process.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 3, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Goro Miyazaki’s film is about the point at which we decide not what we want to be when we grow up, but who, and the way the tiniest moments in our lives often have the most far-reaching effect.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 3, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Wan’s film is a sturdily built supernatural chiller, with next-to-no digital effects or gore, and it delivers its scares with a breezy lack of urgency.- The Telegraph
- Posted Aug 3, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Alpha Papa’s biggest laughs explode from moments of pure inconsequence.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 25, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The Lone Ranger is a grand folly that, in a sane world at least, would never have been made, although I’m really rather glad someone did.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The previous X-Men film, First Class, was secure enough in its own skin to embrace its comic side. Mangold’s picture affects a pubescent snarl instead: that’s the difference between comic and daft.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The whole thing unspools at such an unremittingly earnest pitch that it leaves you groping under your seat for a ventilator.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
This Iberian spin on the Snow White legend is a curio and a wonder; a silent fairy tale woven from softest velvet.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 12, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The animation is photoreal – startlingly and mesmerisingly so. And the depth of feeling the tale of their friendship evokes is matched only by your incredulity, as you paw at your eyes six minutes later, that you are crying about two computer-generated umbrellas.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 12, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The World’s End is a fitting end to the trilogy: it is by turns trashy, poignant and gut-bustingly funny, and often all three at once.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 9, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Mikkelsen, who is not given to sympathetic roles, has never been better. This is cinema that sinks its claws into your back.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 9, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
At first, watching Pacific Rim feels like rediscovering a favourite childhood cartoon – but del Toro has flooded the project with such affection and artistry that, rather than smiling nostalgically, you find yourself enchanted all over again.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 8, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Wheatley’s extraordinary film shakes you back and forth with a rare ferocity, but the net result is stillness.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 5, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
In the end, I was nagged by a question posed by Polley’s sister Joanna in the film’s opening minutes. “I guess I have this instinctive reaction: who cares about our ----ing family?” The answer, of course, is Polley herself, who smilingly tells us that a story like hers can never truly be tied down, even as she screws every last piece into place.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jul 3, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Like Someone in Love, is another miracle at close quarters. Its subject is the impossibility of intimacy in the modern world: chewy stuff, to be sure, but Kiarostami explores it with a depth and delicacy that recalls the Japanese master Yasujiro Ozu.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 21, 2013
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 21, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
This cherishable Irish B-picture is one of those rare horror films with an unimprovable premise.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 10, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
What we get is a collection of moderately violent action set-pieces untroubled by humour or broader coherence.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 3, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
While his ambitious conceit hangs together over two hours of loudly-declaimed meta-metatheatricality, my word, does it feel like an unholy slog.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 2, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
It is an extraordinary, prolonged popping-candy explosion of pleasure, sadness, anger, lust and hope.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 27, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
François Ozon’s Young & Beautiful is, in the very best sense, a film that won't add up.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 27, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
This is a fun piece of play-acting for as long as it lasts, but it never quite feels like much more. Things may become kinky in front of the lens, but you can sense Polanski lurking behind it throughout, always ready with his safe-word. Cut!- The Telegraph
- Posted May 27, 2013
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- The Telegraph
- Posted May 27, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
So hauntingly perfect is Barnard’s film, and so skin-pricklingly alive does it make you feel to watch it, that at first you can hardly believe the sum of what you have seen.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 27, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
The real reason to see this is Swinton and Hiddleston’s sexy, pallid double act: two old souls in hot bodies who have long tired of this Earth, but have nowhere else to make their home.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 26, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
Dialogue aside, the craftsmanship is unimpeachable, and Gray takes a timeless approach to pacing and camerawork: even the sunlight is sepia-tinted. But the grand themes of loyalty and ambition never catch fire, and the film’s few truly memorable moments are invariably its smallest.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 26, 2013
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- Robbie Collin
A shimmering coup de cinema to make your heart burst, your mind swim and your soul roar.- The Telegraph
- Posted May 26, 2013
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