The always excellent duo Joe Lawlor and Christine Malloy create a tense, gripping portrait of Rose Dugdale, who left behind a life of privilege to become a key figure in the IRA.
A new teacher is tasked with finding out which of her students is responsible for a series of thefts in Ilker Çatak's drama.
A dog creates a robot friend for himself in Pablo Berger's intricate, amazing silent animation.
Shoddy, rushed sequel that rides ramshod over past glories without offering anything new and exciting to this stale franchise.
Doug Liman directs Jake Gyllenhaal in this mirthless unnecessary reimagining of the 1989 Swayze classic.
Ben Mullinkosson captures the agony and the ecstasy of Chinese club kids in this ode to one of Chengdu's underground queer spaces.
Margaret Qualley and Geraldine Viswanathan star in a delightfully daffy road movie, written by Ethan Coen and his wife Tricia Cooke.
A young arrival at an Australian nunnery begins to exhibit unusual powers in Warwick Thornton's fantastical drama.
The relationship between two young schoolboys has ramifications for their local community in the new drama from Hirokazu Koreeda.
A young couple's romance threatens the future of their village in Ramata-Toulaye Sy's visually stunning but underdeveloped drama.
Kevin Macdonald gives his subject enough rope in this slippery documentary about how we project a sense of regret.
The latest documentary from Tunisian director Kaouther Ben Hania centers a quartet of young women whose lives are changed forever when two of them join ISIS.
Adam Sandler stars as a lonely cosmonaut who befriends a giant, benevolent spider at the edge of the universe in Johan Renck's spiritual odyssey.
Jessica Chastain and Peter Sarsgaard star in Michel Franco's dour drama about high school classmates who unexpectedly reunite amid painful circumstances.
Bradley Cooper soars in this lovingly crafted biopic of legendary composer Leonard Bernstein.
Olivia Colman is hampered by thin material in this overly-quaint parochial Britcom which contains a fair bit of swearing.
Wim Wenders' gentle character studies features a beautifully restrained performance from Kôji Yakusho, as a toilet cleaner who lives a simple life in Tokyo.
Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya shine as mystical freedom fighters in this grandiose and often-breathtaking blockbuster.