Gaston and LeFou are Beauty and the Beast's most connected couple: review
Director Bill Condon's attention to psychological realism sits awkwardly in a story of old-fashioned, anti-feminist romance.
Jake Wilson was born in London and grew up in Melbourne. He got his start reviewing movies for various websites and has been writing for the Age since 2006.
Director Bill Condon's attention to psychological realism sits awkwardly in a story of old-fashioned, anti-feminist romance.
Director Dean Israelite relies on tired teen tropes to explore the lives of his unlikely superheroes.
This film can't decide whether it's for kids or adults, let alone where reality ends and fantasy begins.
Rachel Ward shines as Otto Bloom's love interest in a film that otherwise feels like a vehicle for the director's own wish fulfillment.
This enjoyable biopic uses Australian films to tell the story of Stratton's life – and some of the parallels might catch you by surprise.
Homegrown films tend to be most popular when they traffic in familiar iconography, and by that reckoning I predict some success for Rachel Perkins' Jasper Jones.
Francophiles and cinema lovers are in for a treat.
An average cast, heavy-handed symbolism and "bewilderingly disjointed" editing make poor work of this dark period in Soviet history.
The Family filmmaker's narrative occasionally gets bogged down far from the main track.
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