A few big Hollywood movies screened for the London press over the past week, including
Snatched, the mother-daughter kidnapping romp starring Goldie Hawn and Amy Schumer. It's silly enough to be a guilty pleasure, but could have been a lot more. Dwayne Johnson and Zac Efron lead the charge in the goofy action-comedy movie version of the iconic TV series
Baywatch. And Charlie Hunnam takes the lead in Guy Ritchie's entertaining and somewhat rushed approach to
King Arthur: Legend of the Sword.
Meanwhile, Dominic Cooper struggles to elevate the terrorism thriller
Stratton above B-movie status. Much better were a couple of foreign movies: from China,
I Am Not Madame Bovary is a fiendishly clever exploration of social connection and darker motivations, while
Machines is a riveting, relevant, gorgeously shot documentary about workers in an Indian fabric factory.
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Coming up this next week, while many London-based critics have decamped to the South of France for the Cannes Film Festival, we will catch up with Johnny Depp's fifth turn as Jack Sparrow in
Pirates of the Caribbean: Salazar's Revenge (aka
Dead Men Tell No Tales), Chris Evans' drama
Gifted, the Scottish biopic
Tommy's Honour, the animated adventure
Monster Island, the Mexican rom-com
Wild Awakening and the shorts compilation
Boys on Film 16: Possession.
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