Friday, 20 February 2026

For what it's worth...




UK box office Top Ten (for the weekend of February 13-15, 2026):

1 (new) "Wuthering Heights" (15)
2 (new) GOAT (PG)
3 (new) Crime 101 (15)
4 (1) Send Help (15)
5 (3) The Housemaid (15)
6 (5) Zootropolis 2 (PG)
7 (4) Hamnet (12A) **
8 (new) Stitch Head (U) **
9 (new) Whistle (15) ***
10 (8) Avatar: Fire and Ash (12A) ***

(source: BFI)

My top five:
2. A Knight's Tale [above]
 

DVD/Blu-Ray/Download top ten: 

1 (new) The Housemaid (15)
2 (1) Zootropolis 2 (PG)
3 (2) Predator: Badlands (12) **
4 (3Sinners (15) ****
5 (new) Anaconda (12)
6 (new) Hamnet (12) **
7 (6) Dracula (15)
8 (7) Wicked: For Good (PG)
9 (5) 28 Years Later (15) ****
10 (35) Bugonia (15) **


My top five: 
1. Sisu: Road to Revenge
4. Keeper


Top five films on terrestrial TV this week:
1. Malcolm X (Tuesday, BBC Two, 11pm)
2. We Dive at Dawn (Saturday, BBC Two, 2.05pm)
3. Point Break (Wednesday, BBC One, 12midnight)
4. The Fabelmans (Saturday, Channel 4, 9.15pm)
5. Spider-Man (Sunday, BBC One, 2.50pm)

"Peaky Blinders - The Real Story" (Guardian 19/02/26)


Peaky Blinders – The Real Story
**

Dir: Robin Bextor. Documentary with: Grant Montgomery, Michael Hogan, Carl Chinn and the voice of Andrew Insol. 61 mins. Cert: 15

Given the global reach of the Peaky Blinders, next month’s Netflix-backed movie threatens to be as momentous as final Downton or new Bridgerton, only with razorblades concealed about its person. This week, that anticipation secures a pay-per-view release for this hour-long, meat-and-potatoes primer, fashioned by Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s dad Robin out of much the same combo of talking heads, drone shots and fair-use clips you’d ordinarily encounter on free-to-air Channel Five. Uppermost in the edit is a recognition that Steven Knight’s creation was one of those Peak TV shows that blurred the televisual and cinematic. Heaven’s Gate, The Godfather and Rio Bravo provide contextualising material; critic Michael Hogan positions the show as Knight’s Once Upon a Time in the West Midlands.

The talk is widescreen, at least, even if the delivery format remains resolutely telly. Bextor’s most illuminating enquiries arrive early on, in addressing how Knight expanded upon stories bequeathed by his parents, inspiring first a concerted attempt to recreate Birmingham’s working-class past and thereafter a modern pop-cultural phenomenon. Production designer Grant Montgomery recalls recycling sets in the show’s formative BBC days; Hogan hails the “rebel music” – the anvil-smashing rock and pop – which helped catch ears as well as eyes. It was a popular sensation before it developed into a network-hopping brand, a subculture endorsed and sustained by those Shelbian undercuts visible everywhere from Balsall Heath to Buenos Aires.

That’s the audience, then, though fans might want someone to pull out a cosh amid the doc’s historical nitpicking – and long for greater VFM besides. Just as Knight’s show became emblematic of an unusually confident moment in UK TV, so this patchwork tribute indirectly reflects today’s mend-and-make-do arts coverage. (In previous eras, Knight’s cultural triumph would surely have merited the full Yentob treatment.) Bextor nevertheless covers a fair bit of turf, taking irrepressible Brum historian Carl Chinn’s walking tour and paying a cautionary visit to the West Midlands Police Museum. Perfunctorily packaged though it all is, there’s even a lesson for the industry to heed going forwards: as Knight puts it, “If you’re not telling the stories of 70% of the population, you’re missing 70% of the story.”

Peaky Blinders - The Real Story will be available to rent digitally from Monday 23rd. 

Thursday, 19 February 2026

On demand: "The Ugly Stepsister"


Emilie Blichfeldt's
The Ugly Stepsister - which earned a leftfield yet deserved Oscar nomination last month for Best Make-Up and Hairstyling - has the air of a Whose Line Is It Anyway? audience suggestion: it's the Nordic film industries revisiting the Cinderella legend after the manner of Nicolas Winding Refn, which means lurid period imagery, an electronic score and a desire to revel in the artistic freedoms provided by an 18 certificate. More grisly than Disney, vastly more perverse than Wicked, it charges full-pelt into Angela Carter territory on horseback, confident in the knowledge that there are many more young women who self-identify as ugly than there are those who see themselves as flaxen-haired princesses. Blichfeldt reframes this story through the twin prisms of class and gender. Our heroine Elvira (Lea Myren) is a gawky brunette with zits and braces whose social-climbing mother Rebekka (Ane Dahl Torp) has married into the aristocracy for a financial protection that disappears overnight after her aging husband expires at the dinner table. Now Rebekka needs a new arrangement, having three girls to raise singlehandedly: the aforementioned Elvira, her sensible, tomboyish sister Alma (Flo Fagerli) and inherited stepdaughter Agnes (Thea Sofie Loch Naess), the movie's Cinderella equivalent, who comes to battle with Elvira for the attentions, hand and dowry of the inevitably syphilitic local Prince (Isac Calmroth). As this sometime bedtime story is rerouted towards a new, unhappy ending, Blichfeldt is revealed as a costume-drama fiend who's studied everything from Picnic at Hanging Rock to TV's The Great and - more significantly - grasped what might still be done within this enduringly popular genre to overturn the status quo. She's also, one notes, a Lars von Trier acolyte ready to pile provocation atop provocation, seeking to make us wince and squirm; the caveat is that even her film's more outlandish gestures retain some correspondence with regrettable reality.

The girls' dual pursuit of the Prince encompasses facial reconstruction surgery undertaken by a cokehead sawbones who advertises his services with the slogan "Beauty is Pain"; crash diets; gropey, leery men; the fairytale equivalent of a training montage, as Elvira is coached through the rituals of ladyhood by one Miss Kronenberg (wink wink); and, amid a clutch of unsparing close-ups of vulnerable body parts, some business with eyes and needles and blades and toes you may well prefer to look away from. In the central role, Myren proves as resilient as the shapeshifting young leads of Julia Ducorneau's recent causes célèbres: she's obliged to leave her vanity in her trailer along with her phone, but nothing phases her, she heals and transforms quickly and effectively - albeit under considerable narrative duress - and she understands exactly what this story is targeting. She lands some form of reward in being remodelled as Sydney Sweeney heading into the Prince's ball, but then her hair begins to come out in clumps (swings and roundabouts), and she winds up having a vast tapeworm extracted from her in a grand grossout finale that recalls a conjuror's showstopping trick: ta-da! Her character is from first to last a victim of the beauty regime, but the actress becomes an active conspirator in Blichfeldt's efforts to undermine the patriarchy (and those sisters who still seek to uphold its strictures). If the latter's methods lean, sometimes slide towards the sensational, it is at least the kind of sensationalism that makes for grabby, poppy cinema, and sensationalism in the service of something greater than mere titillation, which wasn't precisely the case with last year's awards-season talking point The Substance (and I also gather isn't quite the case with Emerald Fennell's current charttopping hatewatch "Wuthering Heights"). Were it not for that prohibitive certificate and occasional flashes of explicit sex (how Scandinavian of her), you could well imagine teachers rolling in those big tellies that aren't currently booked out to show Adolescence to teenage boys so as to screen Blichfeldt's film to thoughtful fifth-form girls. Don't live your life like this, those educators might say beforehand by way of supportive context; the rewards cannot be worth all this suffering.

The Ugly Stepsister is currently available to rent via Prime Video, and will be released on Blu-ray through Second Sight on Monday 23rd.

Wednesday, 18 February 2026

Falling down: "If I Had Legs I'd Kick You"


Our various Academies, in their wisdom, have overlooked or disregarded Jennifer Lawrence's turn in Lynne Ramsay's
Die My Love: too much - too messy, perhaps - in a film that didn't find the groundswell of popular support some critics hoped it would. It's left to Mary Bronstein's If I Had Legs I'd Kick You, then, to represent the outer limits of female performance and endurance as the 2025-26 awards season enters its home straight: here is a familiar face being put through the ringer and otherwise pushed to her very limits in a dark indie comedy-drama from the folks who previously brought you the Safdies' Good Time and Uncut Gems. The face belongs to Rose Byrne, taking a stride or seven beyond her preliminary work on Apple TV's Physical in the role of Linda, a people-pleasing working mother trying to hold it together while running the gauntlet of modern life: a near-permanently absent husband, a daughter with an eating disorder and anxiety besides, domestic plumbing issues that result in her once-perfect Montauk home being flooded even before Bronstein has flashed her Evan Dando-sounding title on screen in horror-movie crimson. Certainly, there are horrific elements in play here: we're watching a potentially fatal existential crisis collide with something more literal. For Bronstein, modern life is a matter of treading water, while hoping the sky isn't also going to cave in on you; her film crystallises a moment where all our pre-existing structures and sureties have been undermined and nobody really seems to know what day it is, in large part because the majority of us have been forced to scrabble around like blue-arsed flies to keep ever more feral wolves from the door. The daughter's anxiety is understandable, to say the least.

In a typically Safdiean manoeuvre, Bronstein isn't trading in plot so much as pile-up, a process made literal in her antsy driving scenes (every time Linda gets behind a wheel, you fear someone's going to get hurt) and the fractious answerphone messages that accumulate as our newly displaced heroine is tugged this way and that. The droll fun here - if fun's the word - is that everybody Linda bumps into appears to be undergoing their own idea of their own worst day. Over the phone, Linda's husband is repeatedly short with her; he sounds like George Costanza - and the movie gains a dimension if you approach it as a treatise on what it might be like to find yourself married to George Costanza - but turns out to be Christian Slater. The doctor treating the daughter - played by Bronstein herself, the thinking person's Gal Gadot - is prone to nagging and fingerpointing; a jobsworth motel clerk (Ivy Wolk) won't serve Linda the alcohol that might at least take an edge or two off; her shrink (Conan O'Brien) veers between distractible and outright evasive. It's very funny when we discover, in one of the rare moments when the protagonist can return to her day job, that Linda is herself a therapist, obliged to spend her days listening to patients who fall on a spectrum between needy and sincerely troubled and who generally only confirm her in her harassed outlook. At best, she brings empathy to her task: she knows exactly what her clients are going through, partly because she too is processing some of it mid-session. But you can equally forgive her for seeming distracted or brusque or sharp, as she often is; it's the errors of personal and professional judgement that concern Bronstein, and therefore us. In cataloguing those errors, though, Bronstein succeeds in showcasing a performance that really does feel like an entire, complex universe. Until the closing moments, we don't see the daughter and husband, so fixated is the filmmaker's gaze on the agonised contours of Byrne's face; in some ways, it's a directorial compliment (she sees Linda in all her agitated and spiralling glory), but this camera also seems another of the pressures bearing down on this woman. 

Byrne's myriad acting nominations this season, then, are on one level a reflection of the degree of difficulty involved here. This is a role to keep an actor awake at night: for just shy of two hours, If I Had Legs is all about Linda, and a sensitive performer might well worry whether she was being heroic enough, or at all. (One semi-legit criticism - which the film obliquely addresses over the course of Linda's haphazard relationship with a motel handyman, played very capably by A$AP Rocky - would be that these are first-world, white-lady problems.) An attractive performer, meanwhile, might also fret about how zonked Bronstein wants to make her look in those mercilessly tight close-ups. Yet Byrne doesn't just withstand such scrutiny, she responds with a (characteristically Antipodean?) resilience and fortitude; she remains extremely relatable, even - especially, perhaps - as Linda takes to screaming into a pillow. Bronstein acted in her husband Ronald's Frownland, one of this century's most radically uncompromising indie propositions, in that it didn't want to be liked (or, really, sat through) at all. Some trace of that film persists into this one via the black hole in Linda's ceiling, which becomes increasingly fraught with meaning, some of it structural, some of it depressive, some of it maternal. If I Had Legs is, however, a product of a more emollient imagination, and a more commercially minded studio in A24: it knows the value of a star who might better sell us on all this stress, and of the mordant humour that helps to lighten the load. O'Brien's normie presence is expertly deployed as someone who has got it together but wants you to know it, and I feel I should also praise the hamster whose fate speaks - maybe squeaks - to bruising lived experience on the Bronsteins' part. It's a tough old world out there, and Linda's is not a crisis that could be eased much by any emotional support animal - but it's some feat for an indie film released this far into the 21st century to remind you of Jill Clayburgh's heyday and those old Cassavetes-Gena Rowlands collaborations.

If I Had Legs I'd Kick You opens in selected cinemas from Friday.

Tuesday, 17 February 2026

"O' Romeo" (Guardian 16/02/26)


O’ Romeo
**

Dir: Vishal Bhardwaj. With: Shahid Kapoor, Triptii Dimri, Avinash Tiwary, Nana Patekar. 178 mins. Cert: 18

It must be Misbegotten Adaptations Week. This Hindi gangland epic’s credentials are impeccable: director Vishal Bhardwaj previously wowed with textured, inventive variations on Macbeth (Maqbool, 2003), Othello (Omkara, 2006) and Hamlet (Haider, 2014). Rather than a straightforward modernisation of Romeo and Juliet, his latest instead revisits a grisly true-crime story ripped from Hussein Zaidi’s Mafia Queens of Mumbai, the compendium that also inspired Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s 2022 hit Gangubai Kathiawadi. The results align Bhardwaj’s cinema with the newly lurid turn mainstream Bollywood has taken via recent smashes Animal and Dhurandhar, but it’s jarring to witness, as if Kenneth Branagh had followed his turn-of-the-Nineties Shakespeare successes by making Natural Born Killers.

For Venice (or Baz Luhrmann’s Venice Beach), Bhardwaj swaps in the Mumbai underworld of the 1990s, ushering on the movies’ first Romeo to be a moral degenerate. Shahid Kapoor’s Hussein Ustara – nicknamed Romeo – is a heavily tattooed bellower employed as a hitman for a local godfather; his Juliet (Animal’s Triptii Dimri) an aggrieved widow clutching a sizeable hitlist. These two are star-crossed: he rescues her amid her bungled assassination attempt on the lawyer smearing her late husband, earning them both powerful foes. Yet they’re chiefly blood-splattered and otherwise begrimed: the fish tank through which Leo glimpsed Claire Danes here abuts the bed to which this Romeo takes two escorts while his Juliet listens in. Happy Valentine’s week, everybody.

Bold imagemaking and considered design persists through the murk, and the performances are strong. Kapoor and Dimri commit to this plot’s peculiar demands, while Nana Patekar is appreciably sly as our anti-hero’s wearied handler. Yet where Gangubai showcased Bhansali’s heightened tonal sensitivity, these gruelling three hours veer between crude and emotionally inert: a tale of obsession and abjection, with its dead-eyed lovers dragging one another towards the gutter and the grave. It’s the kind of distinctive misfire only an artist could make, typically when they’re so hung up on a story they swallow its poisons whole. Still, mildly heartbreaking to see such a thoughtful cineaste tossing his library card to play the leering tough guy: that title invites reading with a rueful shake of the head.

O' Romeo is now showing in selected cinemas.

Saturday, 14 February 2026

On demand: "Soundtrack to a Coup d'État"


The film essayist Johan Grimonprez last broached British cinemas all the way back in 2010 with Double Take, where the films of Alfred Hitchcock and the events of the Cold War criss-crossed in supremely entertaining and illuminating fashion. With Soundtrack to a Coup d'État, Grimonprez offers two histories for the price of one, on subjects which once more intertwine. The first is a history of what Billy Joel in "We Didn't Start The Fire" summarised as "Belgians in the Congo", that mid-20th century colonial misadventure that climaxed with the murder of the democratically elected Patrice Lumumba by forces keeping a beady eye on the country's vast rubber, copper and uranium deposits. The second film - lest the first appear a touch dry - concerns American jazz at the turn of the 1960s: Dizzy Gillespie, Louis Armstrong, Nina Simone et al. The connection between the two - and it's not such an arbitrary one - is that, in the very same moment, jazz had begun to be weaponised by the powers-that-be in a bid to baffle and outwit Soviet leader Nikita Kruschchev (who wasn't a fan); key performers such as Armstrong were sent around the globe, missionary-like, so as to persuade other nations that Eisenhower's America had its house in order. (Even if its ongoing problems with race positioned the majority of its Black population as akin to house slaves.) As you'd maybe expect from an Oscar-nominated doc, Soundtrack proves clear-eyed and serious in its editorial line, yet Grimonprez folds in all that jazz to produce something more cinematic besides: it's Cold War: The Musical! With footnotes! Only the Congolese climate prevents me from adding: On ice!

Rather than proving secondary to this picture, the soundtrack serves as an organising principle. Grimonprez reframes history itself as jazz: sometimes harmonious, often improvised and bordering on unfathomable, occasionally murderously dissonant. But he also gives us film as jazz, too. If the thinking is broadly anti-colonial, so too the montage recognises no borders: this kind of archive footage rubs up against that kind of archive footage, sometimes to underline a point, sometimes to counterpoint, sometimes just to be mischievous. (Witness Eisenhower meeting Kruschchev while Louie sings "I'm confessing that I love you".) Elsewhere, macro and micro mesh. History carries us from the UN in New York to the households of Brazzaville, allowing Grimonprez and editor Rik Chaubet to stitch together a link between pipe-smoking CIA chief Allen Dulles, René Magritte and Colonel Mobutu, head of the armed forces massing against Lumumba. Elsewhere, they create odd little echoes and funny ripples within this history: Khrushchev's tendency to thump tables with his fists in moments of high drama comes to rhyme with Art Blakey's drumming. What becomes impressive is Grimonprez's own command of tempo: whenever the political toing-and-froing is getting too baroque or intense, he can cut away to a marvellous Duke Ellington or Miriam Makeba clip, allowing us to catch our collective breath. 

That back-and-forth movement brings us closer to the shifting allegiances - and mounting turbulence - of this historical moment, when Africa and Asia stood up on the floor of the UN in a push for a more powerful voting bloc. Lumumba and his right-hand woman/comrade-in-arms, the remarkable Andrée Blouin, were unifiers: at the UN, they became a cause others could rally around, while at home, they sought to centralise and consolidate Black power while repelling those liplickers lining up to exploit their homeland. Yet they would be undermined, both from within and without, by those who were prepared to permit Congolese independence - but only so much independence. Events get ugly in the closing stretch, as the historical record insists they must, but it's the most complete account of this crisis I've yet encountered, meticulous in its onscreen sourcing, and lent a further dimension by the material Grimonprez works in: fleeting cameos from Robin Day, Eva Gabor, Fidel Castro and sometime Eurotrash fave Eddy Wally as the singing face of colonial distraction; an ominous drumfill here, a honking, siren-like sax solo there, the wails of a blues singer lamenting yet another historical wrong. Some achievement, all told: you can't fail to come away better informed, but you also emerge wildly stirred and stimulated.

Soundtrack to a Coup d'État is available to rent via Prime Video, YouTube and the BFI Player, and on Blu-ray via Modern Films.

Friday, 13 February 2026

For what it's worth...




UK box office Top Ten (for the weekend of February 6-8, 2026):

1 (new) Send Help (15)
2 (new) Stray Kids: The DominATE Experience (12A)
3 (2) The Housemaid (15)
4 (1) Hamnet (12A) **
5 (5) Zootropolis 2 (PG)
6 (3) Shelter (15)
7 (7) Marty Supreme (15) ***
8 (6) Avatar: Fire and Ash (12A) ***
9 (4) Iron Lung (15) **

(source: BFI)

My top five:
 

DVD/Blu-Ray/Download top ten: 

1 (1) Zootropolis 2 (PG)
2 (7) Predator: Badlands (12) **
3 (2Sinners (15) ****
4 (36) Dogma (15)
5 (4) 28 Years Later (15) ****
6 (8) Dracula (15)
7 (5) Wicked: For Good (PG)
8 (3) One Battle After Another (15) ****
9 (new) Song Sung Blue (12)
10 (23) Now You See Me Now You Don't (12)


My top five: 
1. Sisu: Road to Revenge
3. Keeper


Top five films on terrestrial TV this week:
1. Bonnie and Clyde (Tuesday, BBC Two, 11pm)
2. Crimes of the Future (Sunday, BBC Two, 11.55pm)
3. Beetlejuice (Sunday, BBC Two, 10.30pm)
4. A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon (Saturday, BBC Two, 1pm)
5. The Damned United [above] (Friday, BBC Two, 11pm)