Films starring Woody Harrelson

Champions

By Hannah Strong

Bobby Farrelly goes it alone with this warm but cliched remake of a Spanish language film, in which Woody Harrelson plays a temperamental basketball coach.

review

Triangle of Sadness

By Hannah Strong

Swedish provocateur Ruben Östlund takes us aboard the luxury cruise from hell in his latest over-the-top satire.

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Venom: Let There Be Carnage

By Hannah Strong

Tom Hardy returns as the reporter with an extraterrestrial monkey on his back in Andy Serkis’ zany comic book sequel.

review

Midway

By Adam Woodward

Roland Emmerich’s expensively mounted re-enactment of the Battle of Midway benefits from a balanced perspective.

review

Zombieland: Double Tap

By David Jenkins

A tiresome folly that rejoins us with the characters of a mildly successful 2009 horror-comedy which absolutely no-one remembers.

review

The Highwaymen

By Adam Woodward

This drab Depression-era procedural takes a sideways look at the Bonnie and Clyde saga.

review

Solo: A Star Wars Story

By Adam Woodward

This safe and fan service-heavy Han Solo origin story is the worst Star Wars movie since the prequel trilogy.

review

Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

By David Jenkins

Frances McDormand goes on the war path in director Martin McDonagh’s sensational latest.

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The Glass Castle

By Emily Bray

Director and star of the delightful Short Term 12 return with an underwhelming epic of intergenerational family discord.

review

War for the Planet of the Apes

By David Jenkins

The thinking person’s blockbuster franchise returns with big emotions, incredible effects but very little to actually say.

review

Wilson

By David Jenkins

Woody Harrelson stars in this sketchy but likeable adaptation of Daniel Clowes’ graphic novel.

review

Now You See Me

By Chris Blohm

A film which proves the theory that if magicians were also bankrobbers, they’d still be pretty stupid.

review

Rampart

By Andrew Lowry

A modern noir that nods perfunctorily at the genre’s conventions, but sidelines them as quickly as it can to get to its real business.

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The Messenger

By Josh Winning

The Messenger is a movie that delivers its own moral tale – one many are probably not going to like.

review

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