Skip to main content
Games Radar Newsarama Total Film Edge Retro Gamer
GamesRadar+ GamesRadar+ The smarter take on movies
UK EditionUK US EditionUS CA EditionCanada AU EditionAustralia
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
Gaming Magazines
Gaming Magazines
Why subscribe?
  • Subscribe from just £3
  • Takes you closer to the games, movies and TV you love
  • Try a single issue or save on a subscription
  • Issues delivered straight to your door or device
From$12
Subscribe now
Don't miss these
Claire Danes as Aggie Wiggs and Matthew Rhys as Nile Jarvis in The Beast in Me.
Streaming Services The best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Prime Video, HBO Max, and more
Jamie Lee Curtis as Tess Coleman and Lindsay Lohan as Anna Coleman in Freakier Friday.
Streaming Services 6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (November 14-16)
Lindsey Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis in Freakier Friday
Streaming Services 6 of the best new shows and movies streaming this week on Disney Plus, Netflix, Prime Video, and more (November 17–23)
David Corenswet as Superman being arrested by Ultraman, Frank Grillo as Rick Flag Sr. and María Gabriela de Faría as The Engineer in the Superman trailer
Streaming Services The best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Disney Plus, Amazon Prime Video, and more
Jonah Wren Phillips in 2025 horror movie Bring Her Back
Streaming Services 6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (October 3-5)
Liam Hemsworth as Geralt in The Witcher season 4
Streaming Services From The Witcher season 4 to Star Wars: Visions, these are the best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Prime Video, Disney Plus, and more
Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein in Frankenstein
Movies The 25 best movies on Netflix to watch this week
Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein in Frankenstein
Streaming Services 6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (November 7-9)
A House of Dynamite
Streaming Services 6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (October 24-26)
Bill Skarsgård as Pennywise the Clown in IT: Welcome to Derry
Streaming Services From IT: Welcome to Derry to Weapons, these are the best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, HBO Max, and more
Stitch relaxes in Lilo & Stitch.
Streaming Services The best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Disney Plus, Amazon Prime Video, and more
Splinter Cell Deathwatch
Streaming Services 6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (October 17-19)
Wednesday season 2 part 2 Gwendoline Christie
Streaming Services The best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Disney Plus, Paramount Plus, and more
The Witcher
Streaming Services 6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (October 31 - November 2)
Gen V
Streaming Services 6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (September 19 - 21)
Trending
  • Best Netflix Movies
  • Best movies on Disney Plus
  • Movie Release Dates
  • Best Netflix Shows
  1. Entertainment
  2. Movies

Movies to watch this week at the cinema: Jackie, Split, Lion, more...

Features
By Total Film Staff published 16 January 2017

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Out on Friday 20 January

Out on Friday 20 January

Natalie Portman is the First Lady. James McAvoy finds 23’s a crowd. Google Earth saves the day for Dev Patel.

Yes, here's this week's new releases. Click on for our reviews of Jackie, Split, xXx: Return of Xander Cage, Lion, and Goodfellas.

For the best movie reviews, subscribe to Total Film.

Page 1 of 6
Page 1 of 6
Jackie

Jackie

Take a look at this year’s batch of awards-friendly biopics (Lion, A United Kingdom, Queen of Katwe) and you’ll see they tend to close with footage or pictures of the real people they’re based on. Jackie, Pablo Larraín’s gutsy, non-linear portrait of Jacqueline Kennedy in the run-up to her husband’s assassination, and the aftermath, goes one better by weaving actual archive with its ingenious fabrications, almost as if it’s daring us to spot the join.

Witness its recreation of A Tour of the White House with Mrs. John F. Kennedy (1962), a seminal television special in which the First Lady unveiled the results of a $2m restoration project she personally spearheaded. Up close it’s Natalie Portman, flawlessly replicating Jackie’s breathy delivery regal demeanour and wariness in front of the camera. But in long shot it’s Kennedy herself, silently participating from beyond the grave.

Anyone who saw Larraín’s 2012 film No will know how deftly the Chilean director can piece together compelling big-screen stories from historical facts. Yet his English language debut represents a quantum leap, offering a bold new take on one of the 20th Century’s most emotive episodes from the viewpoint of the person nearest it.

Like Sully, this is a 90-minute film that revolves around a few fateful seconds. Yet screenwriter Noah Oppenheim finds an artful way of forestalling it by having Jackie interrogated by an unnamed reporter (Billy Crudup) who gently coaxes his brittle interviewee into sharing her perspective on the events of 22 November 1963.

As we build up to the assassination, we watch snapshots of what went before and after: a musical performance beside her husband (uncanny lookalike Caspar Phillipson), a traumatised Jacqueline accompanying his coffin out of Dallas, and a jaw-dropping sequence of her wandering through an eerily vacant White House, backed by Richard Burton burbling Lerner and Loewe’s ‘Camelot’. We also watch Lyndon B. Johnson (John Carroll Lynch) being sworn in on Air Force One, leaving Mrs. Kennedy out in the cold before she’s even had a chance to wash the blood from her hair.

Less integral is a pace-sapping dialogue between Jackie and a priest (John Hurt) in which matters of faith and fidelity are toyed with. That, fortunately, does nothing to diminish Portman’s majestic performance, an act of inhabitation whose embodiment of raw, lacerating grief is matched by the indomitability she displays as America’s First Widow.

Determined JFK will stand in posterity alongside Washington and Lincoln, Jackie fights through her anguish to give him the funeral he deserves. Larraín, you feel, has crafted her the cinematic tribute she deserves, too.

THE VERDICT: Portman’s Oscar-worthy work crowns an unconventional study of an icon, while Mica Levi’s score is sublime.

Director: Pablo Larraín; Starring Natalie Portman, Billy Crudup, Peter Sarsgaard, John Hurt; Theatrical release: January 20, 2017

Neil Smith

Page 2 of 6
Page 2 of 6
Split

Split

Meet Dennis. He wears glasses, has OCD and kidnaps girls from parking lots. Dennis lives in a windowless basement with Hedwig, a nine-year-old who loves Kanye West (“He’s my main man!”) and keeps hamsters. Dennis and Hedwig are kept in line by Patricia, a prim matriarch who likes sweaters, brooches and carving knives. And then there’s Barry, a wannabe fashion designer who freely admits he has “feelings of being overwhelmed”.

Then again, Barry might be Dennis. Or Jade, or Samuel, or any one of the other “alters” that live inside Kevin (James McAvoy), a troubled young man whose dissociative identity disorder (DID for short) means he has 23 distinct personalities fighting for his body.

Small wonder that his prisoners Casey (Anya Taylor-Joy), Marcia (Jessica Sula) and Claire (Haley Lu Richardson) are as bemused as they are terrified. Not only do they not know why they’ve been abducted, they also don’t know by whom.

We’re used to fiendish plots emanating from M. Night Shyamalan, the precocious wunderkind behind The Sixth Sense and Signs whose career became a rocky road since The Village (2004). Split, though, might well be his most compellingly warped concoction to date, its genre trappings – think Room meets The Missing at 10 Cloverfield Lane – acting merely as gateway drugs to the altogether more demented thriller taking place within Kevin’s noggin.

The film’s torment of its female leads does border at times on exploitation; on the other hand, it does pave the way for Casey to come into her own, the character’s history of abuse giving the nous she’ll need if she’s to survive this subterranean nightmare.

Taylor-Joy, so impressive in The Witch, is even finer here as a deceptively docile captive whose passivity masks both intelligence and gumption. Yet it would be foolish to suggest this is anything but James McAvoy’s movie.

In a role that’s effectively a dozen performances in one, the X-Men actor is simply astounding. Chillingly cold one moment, malevolently mumsy the next, he offers the modern equivalent of Alec Guinness’ turn in Kind Hearts and Coronets: a masterclass in physical dexterity and vocal control that builds towards a volcanic eruption of bestial, vein-bulging ferocity when yet another, submerged personality comes bubbling to the surface.

(He is also very funny, grace notes such as Patricia’s conspiratorial winks and Hedwig’s lisp – “eck-thetawa!” – ensuring each persona can both tickle and unsettle.)

It’s too early to say if Split marks the beginning of a return to form for Shyamalan; after all, he’s let us down before. But by the end, those who’ve stuck with him throughout will have ample cause to feel their faith was justified.

THE VERDICT: This is a Shyamalan movie through and through. And it’s his best in some time, thanks to a magnetic McAvoy.

Director: M. Night Shyamalan; Starring: James McAvoy, Anya Taylor-Joy, Haley Lu Richardson, Jessica Sula, Betty Buckley; Theatrical release: January 20, 2017

Neil Smith

Page 3 of 6
Page 3 of 6
xXx: Return of Xander Cage

xXx: Return of Xander Cage

Having skipped the best-forgotten 2005 sequel, Vin Diesel is back as extreme sports super spy Xander Cage in this unnecessary and patently unloved threequel. Brought in from the cold to retrieve a technological mega-macguffin by CIA suit Jane Marke (Toni Collette, scenery chomping), Cage recruits a team of snipers, sexy tech geeks, stuntmen and DJs.

Somewhat impressively, it’s even stupider than this outlandish synopsis sounds, with action that makes the F&F movies look grounded, “hip” dialogue that induces spasms of embarrassment and a shockingly casual disregard for human life. Donnie Yen doing his thing proves the film's sole saving grace.

Director: D.J. Caruso; Starring: Vin Diesel,Nina Dobrev, Ruby Rose, Samuel L. Jackson, Toni Collette, Donnie Yen, Deepika Padukone; Theatrical release: January 19, 2017

Jordan Farley

Page 4 of 6
Page 4 of 6
Lion

Lion

Based on a true story, Lion centres on Saroo (Sunny Pawar), an Indian boy who, after getting lost on a Calcutta train, ends up being adopted in Australia. Twenty years on, our hero (now Dev Patel) scours Google Earth for clues to his lost family…

Commercials director Garth Davis’ debut is a touch over-stretched but impossible to resist – a classy crowd-pleaser with an especially magical first half.

Director: Garth Davis; Starring: Sunny Pawar, Dev Patel, Nicole Kidman, Rooney Mara; Theatrical release: January 20, 2017

Jamie Graham

Page 5 of 6
Page 5 of 6
Goodfellas

Goodfellas

Scorsese at his all-cylinders best, this 1990 classic charts the rise of real-life wannabe mobster Henry Hill (Ray Liotta) under the wing of a bunch of older wise guys (Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci, Paul Sorvino). 

The set-pieces are deservedly famous: the Oscar-winning Pesci’s meltdowns, the nightclub Steadicam shot, Hill’s frantic final day. “To be a gangster was to own the world,” says Hill. You almost believe him.

Director: Martin Scorsese; Starring: Ray Liotta, Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci, Paul Sorvino; Theatrical release: January 20, 2017

Philip Kemp

Page 6 of 6
Page 6 of 6
Total Film Staff

The Total Film team are made up of the finest minds in all of film journalism. They are: Editor Jane Crowther, Deputy Editor Matt Maytum, Reviews Ed Matthew Leyland, News Editor Jordan Farley, and Online Editor Emily Murray. Expect exclusive news, reviews, features, and more from the team behind the smarter movie magazine. 

Read more
Claire Danes as Aggie Wiggs and Matthew Rhys as Nile Jarvis in The Beast in Me.
The best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Prime Video, HBO Max, and more
 
 
Jamie Lee Curtis as Tess Coleman and Lindsay Lohan as Anna Coleman in Freakier Friday.
6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (November 14-16)
 
 
Lindsey Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis in Freakier Friday
6 of the best new shows and movies streaming this week on Disney Plus, Netflix, Prime Video, and more (November 17–23)
 
 
David Corenswet as Superman being arrested by Ultraman, Frank Grillo as Rick Flag Sr. and María Gabriela de Faría as The Engineer in the Superman trailer
The best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Disney Plus, Amazon Prime Video, and more
 
 
Jonah Wren Phillips in 2025 horror movie Bring Her Back
6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (October 3-5)
 
 
Liam Hemsworth as Geralt in The Witcher season 4
From The Witcher season 4 to Star Wars: Visions, these are the best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Prime Video, Disney Plus, and more
 
 
Latest in Movies
David Corenswet as Superman
74 years after their on-screen debut, the first Superman movie villains have finally been made canon in DC Comics
 
 
Josh Gad as Olaf in Frozen
Frozen's leads are going to receive an eye-watering $60 million each for appearing in the Disney hit's third and fourth movies
 
 
Uma Thurman in Kill Bill
An unfilmed Kill Bill short is seemingly launching in Fortnite with Quentin Tarantino's blessing
 
 
Daniel Craig as Benoit Blanc in Wake Up Dead Man
Daniel Craig doesn't show up until 40 minutes into Wake Up Dead Man, and there's a legit reason why Rian Johnson wrote it that way – even if he was a little scared to do so
 
 
Jessie and Bullseye in Toy Story 5
Pixar director says "nobody's being robbed" of the original Toy Story trilogy with Toy Story 5: "They can have that and never watch another if they don't want to"
 
 
Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba in Wicked: For Good
Wicked: For Good earns a lukewarm Rotten Tomatoes score that's almost 20% lower than the first movie's
 
 
Latest in Features
Arc Raiders trailer screenshot of a man's face in red lighting
I tried an Arc Raiders community tip for hunting blueprints after 40 hours of next to nothing, and I found my most-wanted blueprint almost immediately
 
 
The cast of Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
New on Netflix in December 2025: all the latest movies and shows streaming this month
 
 
A soldier standing in heavy armor with his arms crossed in Gears 5
Gears 5 lets you live out your '80s action movie dreams without feeling stuck in the past
 
 
SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless in white being held in front of a PS5
The best PS5 headset 2025: SteelSeries holds onto the crown for another year
 
 
Bill Skarsgard as Pennywise in It: Welcome to Derry
I'm glad Pennywise isn't in It: Welcome to Derry much; it cements the HBO show as the most loyal adaptation of Stephen King's original novel yet
 
 
A header for Dragon Quest 7 Reimagined showing Aishe in a martial arts pose
After just an hour playing Dragon Quest 7 Reimagined, I'm charmed and unsettled in equal measure – this JRPG remake has surprisingly ambitious storytelling goals
 
 
  1. The Mysterium logo, seen on the box
    1
    This enthralling team board game is perfect for playing with family this Thanksgiving
  2. 2
    Kirby Air Riders review: "This racer is also equal parts fighting game, minigame collection, and roguelike – and I'm shocked at how well that works"
  3. 3
    Demonschool review: "This Persona-inspired RPG is full of fun, flair, and ready to chomp away at your free time"
  4. 4
    Morsels review: "The Binding of Isaac style roguelike shooting gets somehow grosser, but struggles to set itself apart"
  5. 5
    Dispatch review: "Critical Role fans rejoice – episodic gaming has been superheroically saved by this incredibly charming band of misfits"
  1. Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba and Ariana Grande as Glinda in Wicked: For Good
    1
    Wicked: For Good review: "Builds to an incredibly cathartic conclusion, but isn't quite as captivating as Part 1"
  2. 2
    The Running Man review: "Some fun action and Glen Powell's star power aren't enough to energize this disappointing Stephen King adaptation"
  3. 3
    Predator: Badlands review: "Die-hard fans may be disappointed, but as a blockbuster action-adventure, Badlands kills it"
  4. 4
    Chainsaw Man – The Movie: Reze Arc review "Storytelling just as compelling as the chainsaws, devils, and visually excessive fight scenes"
  5. 5
    Tron: Ares review: "Misses out by swapping the Grid for the real world"
  1. Rhea Seehorn as Carol Sturka, looking scared, in Pluribus.
    1
    Pluribus season 1 review: "Easily one of the year's best dramas"
  2. 2
    The Witcher season 4 review: "The Henry Cavill-less fourth season is the best yet"
  3. 3
    IT: Welcome to Derry review: "A supremely confident step back into the history of Stephen King's cursed town and killer clown"
  4. 4
    Splinter Cell: Deathwatch review: "A pale imitation of the long-dormant stealth franchise"
  5. 5
    Marvel Zombies review: "A fun expansion of the What If episode with delightful MCU Easter eggs and truly gross R-rated kills"

GamesRadar+ is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Add as a preferred source on Google
  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Review guidelines
  • Write for us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...