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A celebration of the humble bicycle at the Waterfront Hall
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A documentary from the makers of Man on Wire makes for uncomfortable viewing
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Queen's Film Theatre screen a masterpiece of the horror genre by French director Georges Franju
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This really is the final, final destination - or is it?
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Based on a comic book, this Hollywood redux gets lost in translation
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Stanley Kubrick's modernist masterpiece revisited at Queen's Film Theatre
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A final fairwell for the fumbling foursome – but is the silver screen a step too far?
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Werner Herzog's Gulf War 'documentary' sparks debate at the Belfast Photo Festival
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Northern Irish film-makers master the short film format at the Black Box
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The title is long, but the film is short – and packed full of mindless action for all the family
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JJ Abrams' homage to all things Spielberg is 'touching and convincing'
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It's big and it's fun, but this Made in America superhero romp is not at all dumb
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A French suspense film without the suspense makes Romain Duris a dull boy
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An 'unpretentious, poignant and unsettling' documentary about fighting Irish travellers
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Kristin Scott Thomas continues her creative exile on Gallic soil
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White middle-class activists these days, what are they like, eh?
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The end of an era for Potter fans as the boy who lived becomes a man
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'You would have to admit our lives would be easier if our bosses weren't alive'
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Catfights, air rage and one-night stands – who'd be a bridesmaid?
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An Irish western with a Tex-Mex soundtrack and a lot of heart - it's not quite Tarantino, but it tries
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Terrence Malick creates a 'visual poem' for the 21st century - are you willing to be moved?
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Season one exceeded expectations, with season two not far off
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A screwball satire set in 1970s France has contemporary resonances and plenty of laughs
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An inventive documentary telling the tragic story of Ayrton Senna, the Brazilian racing legend
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Killer characters and a marvelous cast can't make up for a convulted plot in DC's latest offering
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Guillem Morales' latest feature is a worthy addition to the growing canon of top-notch Spanish suspense flicks
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It has a new setting, a new bride, but few new ideas - Todd Phillips' sequel is a major comedown
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Irish dancing hopefuls from New York to Russia compete for a trophy and make for an engaging documentary
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Joe Cornish’s slick directorial debut is gripping and funny - if you like The Goonies, you'll love this
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An 'audacious and bizzare' departure for director Kenneth Branagh - but it's not as bad as it looks
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This gritty fantasy can do no wrong as far as Tammy Moore is concerned
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'Like a diet of bitter herbs - this film leaves you unsatisfied,' writes Fionola Meredith
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A screening on the Lagan Boat has Andrew Johnston pining for dry land
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Filmed in Northern Ireland, this garish comedy is 'gross, obnoxious and puerile'. Andrew Johnston loves it
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Peter McCaughan gets hooked up to the machine - literally - to experience Emotional Response Cinema
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Narcissistic wannabes, a plot to kill Bono and a last screen appearance by Pete Postlewaite make this a movie not to miss
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A 'deliciously diabolical' Northern Irish animation about spides and their wicked ways
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Ken Loach has his say on the war in Iraq in this 'old-fashioned thriller of which John Le Carre would be proud'
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A Moving on Music Festival screening introduces the wierd and wonderful Tom Zé
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A screening at the Moving on Music Festival has Steven Rainey waxing lyrical
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A British remake of a British classic - but was it worth the effort?
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Gritty, cool and unsentimental, Richard Ayoade's dramedy is unlike anything British cinema has produced in eons
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Can art be made of the world's largest rubbish dump, Rio's Jardim Gramacho?
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The illustrated sections are unnecessary, but Beat aficionado James Meredith is impressed nevertheless
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The Dude becomes the Duke in the Cohen brothers' western remake that delivers on just about every front
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A refreshingly honest portrayal of an average relationship on the rocks - perhaps not one for Valentine's Day
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The majority are longer than 15 seconds, but this film festival is more than just a gimmick
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Javier Bardem plays a cancer-riddled gangster who talks to ghosts - a possibilty for best foreign language film at the Oscars
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A master-class in how the 'one-percent' rob the rest of us blind by Michael Moore
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The personal cost of ambition and desire is viscerally explored in Darren Aronofsky's latest feature
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A Scottish City of God chronicles the career path of a petty thug on a Glasgow Estate
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No anecdotes, no filming, as the 1970s TV star recites classic works by Pablo Neruda
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Geoffrey Rush shines as an unorthodox speech therapist alongside Colin Firth's troubled King Edward
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Block up the chimney, Santa's not happy in Finland's festive answer to Let the Right One In
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A gruelling tale of survival in the Siberian wastelands leaves Ralph McLean pining for some Christmas frivolity
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The true story of the abduction and murder of seven Cistercian monks in Algeria is Mike Catto's film of the year
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Lost lords and magical swords, the kids will find an escape in the third instalment of the Narnia franchise
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A showcase from the next generation of Irish directors at the Foyle Film Festival impresses Michael Harrison
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The 21st century noir shocker opens the Foyle Film Festival in style, writes Michael Harrison
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Too much navel gazing and not enough action makes Harry a dull boy
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