Coventry Telegraph

WESTERN STARS (PG)

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Here to help: Mackenzie Davis as Grace and Natalia Reyes as Daniella Ramos

abandon by Miller, who entrusts a handful of droll one-liners to his Austrian leading man in the soothing lulls between each digitally augmented storm.

“I’ll be back,” quips Hamilton’s raspy-voiced avenging angel, stealing her co-star’s catchphras­e as an alternate unknown future rolls towards us.

Buckle up.

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TIME waits for no man except for Bruce Springstee­n. The New Jersey-born rocker, affectiona­tely nicknamed The Boss, recently turned 70 but he’s refusing – politely – to slow down as he canters through a creatively rich period of his musical career, which stretches back to the mid-1960s.

In June this year, Springstee­n released his 19th studio album Western Stars, a tribute to the rugged landscape of Southern California and the music of Burt Bacharach and Jimmy Webb, written in the voice of a worldweary Western movie star reminiscin­g in his twilight years.

The LP’s 13 tracks provide a contemplat­ive, flowing narrative for this concert film co-directed by Springstee­n and long-time friend Thom Zimny, which was shot in the heat of summer in a 19th-century barn on the musician’s 378-acre horse farm in Colts Neck, New Jersey.

Sweat glistens on Springstee­n’s arms as he plays the album in its entirety, accompanie­d by a 30-piece orchestra under the musical direction of Rob Mathes.

Each song is introduced by a tone poem penned by Springstee­n that burrows into the deeper meaning of lyrics and their emotional resonance.

“The older you get, the heavier that baggage becomes that you haven’t sorted through,” he solemnly philosophi­ses.

Acoustics in the barn are breath-taking as nine cameras capture unguarded moments between performers, unspoken understand­ing registered with a nod or shared glance as a chorus soars to the wooden rafters.

■ In cinemas for one night only on Monday, October 28.

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BONE-CRUSHING action thriller. Anna (Sasha Luss) contemplat­es taking her own life rather than endure domestic abuse behind closed doors. She is recruited by KGB handler Olga (Dame Helen Mirren) to join the Russian security agency. Anna agrees to serve her KGB masters for five years in return for a new life. KGB commander Vassiliev (Eric Godon) reneges on this deal and Anna is forced to continue her covert work. She goes undercover as a model and her cover is blown by CIA agent Leonard Miller (Cillian Murphy). The Americans recruit Anna to work for them and instruct her to assassinat­e Vassiliev.

■ Download and stream from October 28, and available on DVD/Blu-ray from November 4.

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 ??  ?? Calling shotgun: Linda Hamilton as Sarah Connor
Calling shotgun: Linda Hamilton as Sarah Connor
 ??  ?? Bruce Springstee­n
Bruce Springstee­n
 ??  ?? Sasha Luss as Anna
Sasha Luss as Anna
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