Thursday 14 July 2022

Critical Week: Gone fishing

The heatwave continues, although perhaps as Londoners get tired of the sunshine we're being driven back into air conditioned cinemas! Box office figures for Thor last weekend didn't seem to suffer. Meanwhile this week, I've seen another eclectic collection of films both in cinemas and in my rather sweltering flat. Daisy Edgar-Jones stars in Deep South melodrama Where the Crawdads Sing, which seems deliberately designed for teen girls. Others are likely to find it contrived, even if the actors are excellent. Winona Ryder stars in the offbeat horror thriller Gone in the Night, as a woman looking for answers. It's involving, even if what she discovers is rather silly.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
The Good Boss
The Gray Man • Poppy Field
ALL REVIEWS >
And then there was Sally Phillips in How to Please a Woman, a very gentle Australian sex comedy that's packed with clever insight even if it's too subtle for its own good. Alan Cumming takes on a superbly offbeat role in My Old School, an inventive and fascinating documentary about a Glasgow classroom scandal. The Jordanian drama The Alleys is a visceral multi-strand journey into the Amman suburbs, with unusually complex morality. And telling the story of a trans activist icon, Donna is a warm fly-on-the-wall doc that maintains a clear-eyed focus.

Films to watch in the coming week include Russell Crowe in Prizefighter, Katie Holmes in Alone Together, the comedy-drama The Shuroo Retreat, the romantic drama You Are My Sunshine and the shorts collection Girls Feels: Skin Deep.

No comments: