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Lake Bell writes, directs and stars in this mature and charming rom-com set in the male-dominated world of the voice over artist
John Higgins and Andrew Johnston make the case for and against Ben Wheatley's psychedelic Civil War experiment
The crime author and screenwriter on penning the upcoming BBC Northern Ireland/TG4 Irish-language newsroom drama, Scúp
Scotland loves its golf, but does it love it enough to hand over a Site of Special Scientific Interest to the US billionaire with the dodgy syrup?
Andrew Johnston goes back for a second viewing, and cares even less for James Marsh's troubled characters
Belfast director Jon Wright's latest feature is 'daft and gory enough' to warrant a viewing. Four tentacles up
A definitive exploration of the idiosyncratic filmmaker's remarkable life and career
Oscar-winning Belfast director Terry George returns with a fish-based, Tarantinoesque comedy crime caper
Can acclaimed documentary film-maker James Marsh reinvigorate the Troubles movie genre?
This silent comedy from 1922 inspired everyone from Woody Allen to Mr Bean – and the kids love it
Tim Burden, the man behind the projector, on Iron Man, cinematic ambience and Barry Norman coming to visit
A dramatisation of 'the battle to save Titanic' features homegrown faces and a lot of heart
Agitprop masterpiece given new life by a classical score played on the Ulster Hall's Mulholland Grand Organ
Belfast doubles for Berlin in a new film about the controversial IRA volunteer-turned-Nazi ‘collaborator’, written and directed by Queen's professor, Des Bell
The wolves are dodgy, but Liam Neeson does 'rock bottom' well in this existential action-adventure movie
No talking ponies, animated urchins or CGI, just an old-fashioned epic that sees Spielberg back on form
Despite an all-star cast, too little is left unsaid in this contentious biopic of Margaret Thatcher
The Belfast-born actor talks about the film critics are calling the best British horror movie of its generation
Andrew Johnston finds something even scarier than Andrew Lloyd Webber
Lucas' 1986 clucker isn't as fowl as first thought, and Indy can still pack a punch to that Nazi
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