Kentish Express Ashford & District - What's On

UK FILM TOP 10

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1. Darkest Hour (PG)

The 27 days which led to Winston Churchill’s cry for us to fight on the beaches in 1940, is dramatised in Joe Wright’s film and distinguis­hed by Gary Oldman’s performanc­e.

2. Coco (PG)

Family values resonate far beyond the land of the living in Disney Pixar’s uplifting computeran­imated story scripted by Alfred Molina and Matthew Aldrich. It is a valentine to Mexican culture as seen through the eyes of a 12-year-old boy (voiced by Anthony Gonzalez).

3. Maze Runner: The Death Cure (12A)

Good things come to those fans who have waited two and a half years for the conclusion to the Maze Runner saga, after lead actor Dylan O’brien was seriously injured on the set of the final chapter and production waited almost a year to allow him to recover. Director Wes Ball, who has be at the helm for all three instalment­s, neatly ties up narrative threads.

4. The Greatest Showman (PG)

Razzle smooches dazzle in every choreograp­hed frame of Michael Gracey’s rags-to-riches fairy tale based on the life of circus impresario Phineas Taylor Barnum (Hugh Jackman), set to an infectious score.

5. Early Man (PG)

Aardman Animations turns back the clock thousands of years for a charming comedy of errors that traces the history of football to our club-wielding prehistori­c ancestors. The beautiful game turns ugly in a knockabout script co-written by Mark Burton and James Higginson, as caveman Dug (Eddie Redmayne) challenges a team of Bronze Age superstars to a winner-takes-all match. Nick Park’s hand-crafted romp should score big with family audiences in the run-up to this summer’s World Cup.

6. The Post (12A)

Steven Spielberg’s dramatisat­ion of events leading up to the legal wrangling between the New York Times and president Richard Nixon is a timely depiction of gender inequality and lionises the achievemen­ts of Katharine Graham, publisher of the Washington Post.

7. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (15)

Impeccably scripted Martin Mcdonagh’s explosive morality tale is blessed with a blistering lead performanc­e from Frances Mcdormand. This is a near-perfect film.

8. Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle (12A)

More than 20 years after the original, Jake Kasdan directs an action-packed new instalment. Nerd Spencer Gilpin (Alex Wolff) and three fellow students stumble upon an old Jumanji video game.

9. Downsizing (15)

Small is beautiful in director Alexander Payne’s quirky comedy drama set in the near future, when socially conscious citizens undergo cellular reduction to live in microcommu­nities, which are less of a drain on the Earth’s resources.

10. Padmaavat

Bollywood production Padmaavat is set in medieval Rajasthan, with Queen Padmavati married to a noble king. They live in a prosperous fortress with their subjects until an ambitious sultan hears of Padmavati’s beauty and forms an obsessive love.

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