-
The Drop
James Gandolfini's final film is a gripping ensemble adaptation of the gritty Dennis Lehane novel -
The Imitation Game
Benedict Cumberbatch is extraordinary in Morten Tyldum's flawed biopic of Enigma breaker Alan Turing -
I Am Ali
Claire Lewins uses exclusive audio journals to tell at least part of the legendary boxer's life story -
The Fall
With episode two of series two set to air tonight, we look back at the slow-burning opener -
Third Person
Liam Neeson is an author struggling with a failing narrative in Paul Haggis' similarly unsuccessful ensemble piece -
Serena
Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper make it three for three in Susanne Bier's long-in-the-making English language debut -
'71
Jack O'Connell excels in this taut Troubles-era thriller by director Yann Demange and writer Gregory Burke -
Dracula Untold
Northern Ireland provides a dramatic backdrop to Gary Shore's largely superficial blockbuster -
A Most Wanted Man
Philip Seymour Hoffman is every inch the jaded spook in his final film directed by Anton Corbijn -
A Walk Among the Tombstones
Liam Neeson stars in this stylish, lean adaptation of the Lawrence Block novel -
In Order of Disappearance
Hans Petter Moland channels the Coens in this comic revenge thriller shot on the Norwegian tundra -
The Hundred-Foot Journey
Lasse Hallström's adaptation is aesthetically pleasing but stuffed full of unpalatable clichés -
Second Chance Cinema
Cinephile cooperative screen three Northern Irish films for free at the South Bank Playhouse -
Two Days, One Night
Marion Cotillard gives an unmissable performance in the Dardennes brothers' portrait of life on the edge -
Jeremy Thomas
The heavyweight British film producer discusses a career behind the camera at Queen's Film Theatre -
The Congress
Actress Robin Wright sells a version of herself in Ari Folman's dystopian allegory on paternalist Hollywood -
Lilting
Ben Whishaw stars in Hong Khaou's touching English language debut about sexuality and acceptance -
Joe
Nicholas Cage finds critical salvation in David Gordon Green's latest feature set in the rusted, dilapidated South -
Mood Indigo
Michel Gondry's whimsical adaptation of the Boris Vian novel is a cocked-eyebrow of a film that never lets up -
Grand Central
France is smitten with nuclear energy, but not the workers, in this adaptation of Elisabeth Filhol's satirical novel