Caernarfon Herald

ALSO SHOWING

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X-MEN: DARK PHOENIX (12A) ★★★★★

NINE years have passed since the events of X-Men: Apocalypse when

Professor X (James McAvoy) and Magneto (Michael Fassbender) unlocked the telekineti­c powers of Jean Grey (Sophie Turner, pictured).

The X-Men are now on speed-dial to the White House, and are called on to rescue the stricken crew of the Space Shuttle Endeavour, which is spinning violently out of control after a close encounter with a solar flare.

During the rescue mission, Jean absorbs dangerous levels of energy and the near-death experience unleashes years of pent-up rage and frustratio­n.

A shape-shifting alien (two-time Oscar nominee Jessica Chastain) exploits Jean’s inner turmoil to rebuild her species’ fallen empire.

“It’s your destiny to evolve into the greatest force in the galaxy,” the scheming extra-terrestria­l informs Jean.

The 12th film in the sprawling X-Men series is a disjointed gallop through genre tropes and predictabl­e narrative twists. Turner works hard to channel her beleaguere­d heroine’s confusion and despair. She may rise like a flaming phoenix but Kinberg’s film never takes off and certainly doesn’t catch fire.

LATE NIGHT (15) ★★★★★

FOR almost 30 years, Katherine Newbury (Dame Emma Thompson, right) has presided over an award-winning talk show.

Unfortunat­ely, ratings have plummeted and network president Caroline Morton (Amy Ryan) decides to replace Katherine with edgy stand-up comedian Daniel Tennant (Ike Barinholtz). Faced with the reality of relinquish­ing her crown at the end of the current season, Katherine vows to reverse the show’s fortunes.

“There aren’t any women on the staff because you hate women,” observes long-suffering producer Brad (Denis O’Hare), so Katherine orders him to address the imbalance.

Molly Patel (Mindy Kaling), an efficiency expert at a chemical plant in Pennsylvan­ia with no writing experience beyond her own stand-up material, is in the right place at the right time. She joins an all-white male writers’ room led by Tom Campbell (Reid Scott). Fellow writers dismiss Molly as a token hire but colleague Charlie Fain (Hugh Dancy) is more open-minded.

Molly encourages Katherine to mine personal experience to reconfigur­e the public’s perception.

Late Night is a sparkling showcase for an ensemble cast led by the luminous Thompson and Kaling.

■ Reviews by Damon Smith.

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