The film of the popular video game is finally here!
Sean Anders's comedy-drama about adoption and family.
The true story of the worst ever US oil spill disaster in 2010 when the Deepwater Horizon oil exploration rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico, killing 11 workers and injuring 17 more.
Ted is back with his Boston accent, sharp wit, plush charm, a wife and his forever-‘thunder buddy’ as he fights for his right to be recognised as a person.
The Gambler looks at how a man’s quest for cash becomes his undoing. Exploring a dangerously dark world, it offers lessons in endlessly satisfying one’s cravings.
Cade is a mechanic eking out a living who discovers an abandoned truck. Little does he know it contains Optimus Prime – leader of the heroic Autobots.
Sent on a mission to eradicate a high-ranking al Qaeda operative, four Navy SEALs quickly becomes endangered.
Trench and Stigman are criminals working for drug-lord Papi Greco. What they don’t know is both are undercover agents wanting to infiltrate Greco’s cartel.
Pain and Gain lives up to its misbegotten title with a comedic menagerie of stupid, muscled men armed with hi-tech weapons and in over their heads.
Suspicion is the concept du jour in this cloak and dagger drama that managed to attract the ilk of Mark Wahlberg, Russel Crowe and Catherine Zeta-Jones.
I went into the cinema seeing Ted thinking it was a family film. What? I don't go to the movies that much, and until then I hadn't seen any of the trailers. And the bear just looked so damn fluffy! Cut to the first scene of Ted and John Bennett (Mark Wahlberg) smoking illicent substances out of a peculiar cylindrical device. Got it. I should have known better, after all Ted comes from the pen of Family Guy and American Dad creator Seth MacFarlane. And this is definitely one of MacFarlane's brainchilds.
If you’re thinking of going to watch CONTRABAND be prepared to strap yourself in, hold onto your seat for a twisting, turning and sometimes confusing ride through the dark world of post-9/11 high-stakes smuggling on the high seas.
Christian Bale of "movie meltdown" fame redeems himself in this mesmerising performance