★★★1/2 This animated sports comedy from Sony bursts onto the screen with dazzling energy, delivering a sensory spectacle that delights, even if it falls short of its own title with no true originality or heartfelt depth.
Send Help (2026)
★★★1/2 With a committed McAdams and O'Brien at his disposal, Sam Raimi's "Send Help" shines brightest as a wildly entertaining survival thriller, only to lose its footing in the final act when the cult filmmaker's horror roots take over and cloud the narrative.
Primate (2026)
★★★ This bananas creature feature may be instantly forgettable, but there is undeniable fun in watching a frenzied chimpanzee tear through his hapless victims with ruthless and bloody efficiency.
Mercy (2026)
★1/2 This clunky and lifeless screenlife thriller stumbles over its own ambitions, missing the pulse-pounding excitement expected of a high-concept sci-fi flick, and squandering its to stars by misusing their talents.
No Other Choice (2025)
★★★★ Park Chan-wook dazzles once again with his striking visuals and wickedly sharp humour in this darkly satirical thriller, though it never quite captures the pulse-pounding urgency of his greatest films.
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple (2026)
★★★★1/2 Fiennes and O'Connell deliver riveting performances in this brutal yet unexpectedly hilarious fourth instalment chapter, as Alex Garland's zombie saga fearlessly continues to venture into thrilling new territory.
Rental Family (2025)
★★★★ Brendan Fraser showcases his sensitivity in this gentle, well-natured comedy-drama, inviting us on a moving journey through loneliness and the search for connection in Japanese culture.
Sentimental Value (2025)
★★★1/2 While Joachim Trier's tragicomedy dazzles with technical mastery and standout performances from its close-knit cast, it ultimately falls short of capturing the emotional depth and resonance that defined his earlier works.
Marty Supreme (2025)
★★★★1/2 Josh Safdie's nerve-jangling comedy-drama hurls Timothee Chalamet's detestable table tennis prodigy from one high-stakes disaster to another, as his relentless toxic ambition leaves chaos in his wake.
Avatar: Fire and Ash (2025)
★★ Essentially The Way of Water Part 2, the newest chapter in this epic yet derivative sci-fi saga brings almost nothing fresh to the table , with storylines and character arcs that feel like tired echoes, repeating for the third time.
