Check out the trailer for the upcoming Netflix exclusive biopic Barry, starring Australian actor Devon Terrell as a young Barack Obama.
Billy Lynn returns from Iraq a decorated war hero. As he prepares to be honoured at the 2004 Super Bowl halftime show, the toll the war has taken on him begins to unfold.
The stylish first trailer for the upcoming thriller film Detour has been released, starring young up-and-comer Tye Sheridan.
The final trailer for the upcoming Australian film Red Dog: True Blue has just dropped, featuring more of Blue, the titular character of the film.
The new feature film from Kiwi director Lee Tamahori, Mahana, will receive a limited two week theatrical run in Melbourne and Sydney.
The official trailer for the upcoming Will Smith film Collateral Beauty has been released; a film that may leave you in tears or squirming in your seat.
Not your average true-story drama, Michael Keaton gives such power to The Founder, reminding us that even multi-billion dollar companies can have a heart.
Check out the latest and final trailer for Ben Affleck’s prohibition-era gangster film, Live by Night, based on a novel by Denis Lehane.
The Age of Shadows is both fun and depressing; a mixed-genre film that dramatises a tale of South Korea’s darkest times and is everything it sets out to be.
Our Father is an entertaining, but somewhat trite crime film that reveals what can happen when a morally resolute individual gets in over their head.
Whenever Martin Scorsese and two-time Academy Award winning actor Robert De Niro link up, a masterpiece looms, and the 1976 Oscar-nominated film Taxi Driver is a fine example of that statement.
The trailer to Danny Boyle’s T2 Trainspotting has been released, featuring the cast of the original 1996 cult classic return to reprise their roles.
Flight Crew is a Russian disaster film that has you thinking you’ve seen this all before – until the final act, leaving you pleasantly satisfied in the end.
The second feature from fashion designer Tom Ford, Nocturnal Animals is a slick and beautiful insight into a world of regret, heartbreak and glamour.
A Paul Verhoeven film, like any other hardcore drug, hits with unforgiving force and leaves in quite an unexpected puddle. It’s the unsafe chemical hit you had no idea you needed.
When the events within a film are intensely complicated and heart-rendering, they will often be handled in one of two ways by filmmakers: with restraint, or with pure, ‘we need you to feel all the sad feels’ melodrama. For the most part, Derek Cianfrance’s adaptation of The Light Between Oceans falls under the latter category.


