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
Trending
  • Best Netflix Movies
  • Movie Release Dates
  • Best movies on Disney Plus
  • Best Netflix Shows
  1. Entertainment
  2. Movies

Movies to watch this week at the cinema: Patriots Day, It's Only the End of the World, and more

Features
By Total Film Staff published 20 February 2017

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

Out on Friday 24 February

Out on Friday 24 February

A manhunt led by Mark Wahlberg. Xavier Dolan’s star-studded family drama. Richard Gordon’s compelling George Best doc.

Yes, here's this week's new releases. Click on for our reviews of Patriots Day, A Cure for Wellness, It’s Only the End of the World, The Fits, Sweet Dreams, Southern Fury, and Best.

For the best movie reviews, subscribe to Total Film.

Page 1 of 8
Page 1 of 8
Patriots Day

Patriots Day

Mark Wahlberg and Peter Berg have carved out a niche as re-constructors of real-life disasters, from a Navy Seal op in 2014’s Lone Survivor to the BP oil spill in last year’s Deepwater Horizon.

Patriots Day ups the ante by dramatising the terrorist attack on the 2013 Boston Marathon and the manhunt that followed. The result is a tense slice of faction that nonetheless raises questions about how, and indeed if, events like these should be presented on screen.

Like Deepwater, Patriots begins with breakfast. Not just in the home of Tommy Saunders (Wahlberg), a Boston cop tasked with managing crowds at the finish line, but also Tamerlan Tsarnaev (Themo Melikidze) and his brother Dzhokhar (Alex Wolff), Chechen-born siblings who are heading to the race with a far darker purpose.

We also meet a pair of newlyweds, a security guard and a cop from the suburbs (J.K. Simmons) who all have a part to play in the imminent tragedy – one that, when it comes, is staged with a visceral immediacy and harrowing precision that leaves us rightly shaken and appalled.

Establishing a command centre at a vast and vacant cruise-ship terminal, the FBI – led by a no-nonsense Kevin Bacon – sets about analysing evidence and identifying the perpetrators. The trail leads them swiftly to the Tsarnaevs, whose attempts to elude capture take up the rest of the film in a fashion not dissimilar to Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood.

It also introduces an unexpected hero: one Dun Meng (Jimmy O. Yang), a Chinese student who, having had his Merc jacked by the desperate duo, somehow contrives to escape and alert the authorities.

It’s a brilliantly taut episode, matched by another scene in which Tamerlan’s American wife (Melissa Benoist) is mercilessly grilled by a female interrogator. Another stand-out set-piece is the chaotic confrontation on Simmons’ patch that sees pressure-cooker bombs tossed about like firecrackers.

It’s hard to miss, however, how few of these moments feature Wahlberg, for all of the script’s efforts to incorporate his composite character into the action. It’s as if the film knows that Tommy is a fiction, encouraging us to yell “bogus!” when he uses his encyclopaedic CCTV knowledge to assist Bacon’s investigation or miraculously happens to be in the right place at the right time when one of the bombers finds himself cornered.

Berg’s intention is to show how communities come together in the face of atrocities that are both horribly inevitable and largely unpreventable. But Patriots Day also proves something else: that the requirements of a star-led Hollywood vehicle are antithetical to those of factual recreations with multiple spheres of activity.

THE VERDICT: A senseless outrage is handled with sensitivity in a stirring film that doesn’t need an A-list hero.

Director: Peter Berg; Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Michelle Monaghan, J.K. Simmons, Kevin Bacon; Theatrical release: February 23, 2017

Neil Smith

Page 2 of 8
Page 2 of 8
A Cure for Wellness

A Cure for Wellness

Dusting himself down after The Lone Ranger ate dirt at the box office, Gore Verbinski returns with another looong, misshapen movie. This one plays like an odd cross between Edgar Allan Poe and such sanatorium-set thrillers as Shock Corridor, Shutter Island and American Horror Story: Asylum.

Hotshot Wall Street exec Lockhart (Dane DeHaan) is sent to an exclusive retreat in the Swiss Alps to retrieve CEO Pembroke (Harry Groener). Getting out is a lot harder than getting in, and Lockhart soon finds himself incarcerated with a broken leg, his recovery seemingly only prolonged by the hydrotherapy prescribed by a doctor so evil his name is Volmer (Jason Isaacs).

With Lockhart’s health and sanity draining away as surely as the arresting visuals are leeched of any bright colours, A Cure for Wellness attempts a Lynchian burrow beneath the sanatorium’s placid croquet lawns to diagnose the soul-sickness of modern man, no less. But its message is pompous and murky, only drugging the action.

Still, at least the final act perks up, accelerating into all-out horror territory that’s part Dr. Phibes-style camp and part Hostel-flavoured gore (there’s a reason for that 18 certificate). You might say it’s an insane mix.

THE VERDICT: Plenty of strong images and some effective scenes, but needs an injection of pace and some serious liposuction.

Director: Gore Verbinski; Starring: Dane DeHaan, Mia Goth, Jason Isaacs, Celia Imrie; Theatrical release: February 24, 2017 

Jamie Graham

Page 3 of 8
Page 3 of 8
It’s Only the End of the World

It’s Only the End of the World

A crème de la crème cast (Marion Cotillard, Vincent Cassel and Léa Seydoux) fuels Xavier Dolan’s (Mommy) Cannes Grand Prix winner. But like the awkward family reunion they gather for, nobody comes out well.

It’s shot mostly in claustrophobic close-up, given the usually good actors nowhere to hide over 97 relentless minutes of spittle-soaked squabbling.

Director: Xavier Dolan; Starring: Nathalie Baye, Vincent Cassel, Marion Cotillard, Léa Seydoux, Gaspard Ulliel; Theatrical release: February 24, 2017

Simon Kinnear

Page 4 of 8
Page 4 of 8
The Fits

The Fits

Newcomer Royalty Hightower stars as a pre-teen tomboy who forsakes boxing practice with her brother to join a dance troupe, only for the older girls to start suffering mysterious convulsions.

Director Anna Rose Holmer’s narrative debut is eerily strange, grappling with issues of gender, adolescence and conformity. Mood ultimately trumps character, but Holmer’s helming brims with promise.

Director: Anna Rose Holmer; Starring: Royalty Hightower, Alexis Neblett, Antonio A.B. Grant Jr.; Theatrical release: February 24, 2017

Tim Coleman

Page 5 of 8
Page 5 of 8
Sweet Dreams

Sweet Dreams

Middle-aged journalist Massimo (Valerio Mastandrea) remains deeply troubled by the mysterious death of his mother when he was aged just nine.

Shifting between Massimo’s sepia-toned ’60s childhood and his ’90s adulthood, this sentimental drama comes undone via the redemptive romance between its emotionally introverted protagonist and Bérénice Bejo’s compassionate female doctor.

Director: Marco Bellocchio; Starring: Berenice Bejo, Valerio Mastandrea, Fabrizio Gifuni; Theatrical release: February 24, 2017

Tom Dawson

Page 6 of 8
Page 6 of 8
Southern Fury

Southern Fury

Known in the US by the more apt title Arsenal, this gung-ho crime thriller leaves no generic macho cliché behind. It centres on the brotherly bond between straight-and-narrow JP (Adrian Grenier) and loose cannon Mikey (Johnathan Schaech), who’s kidnapped by Nicolas Cage’s crime boss.

The kind of film that serves only to add to YouTube supercuts of Cage freaking out.

Director: Steven C. Miller; Starring: Adrian Grenier, Nicolas Cage, John Cusack; Theatrical release: February 24, 2017

Stephen Puddicombe

Page 7 of 8
Page 7 of 8
Best

Best

Richard Gordon’s compelling doc charts the rise and fall of ’70s soccer superstar George Best, who quit in his twenties owing to the pressures of fame and a drink problem that would eventually take a tragic toll.

Blending archive footage, candid interviews with colleagues and narration from the late Best himself, the film reminds us of his genius, without sugar-coating his self-destructive tendencies.

Director: Daniel Gordon; Starring: George Best; Theatrical release: February 24, 2017

Tom Dawson

Page 8 of 8
Page 8 of 8
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. 

Share by:
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Whatsapp
  • Pinterest
  • Flipboard
Share this article
Join the conversation
Follow us
Add us as a preferred source on Google
Latest in Movies
Hayden Christensen as Anakin Skywalker
Hayden Christensen would "love to" make a Darth Vader series or movie and would be "there in a heartbeat"
 
 
Timothée Chalamet as Marty Supreme, holding a ping pong paddle and pointing
Timothée Chalamet on dreaming big and his “vastly different” roles in Marty Supreme and Dune: Part 3
 
 
M3GAN 2.0
M3GAN spin-off movie SOULM8TE has been dropped by Universal following a string of 2025 Blumhouse horror blunders
 
 
Spider-Man crouching on a car during the Marvel movie Spider-Man: No Way Home.
Marvel leaks continue as Spider-Man: Brand New Day trailer somehow ends up online
 
 
Disclosure Day
The truth is (almost) out there for Emily Blunt and Josh O'Connor in gripping first trailer for Stephen Spielberg's UFO thriller
 
 
Oona Chaplin as Varang in Avatar: Fire and Ash
Avatar: Fire and Ash debuts to lowest Rotten Tomatoes score of the James Cameron sci-fi trilogy
 
 
Latest in Features
Solo Leveling
2025 was anime's biggest year yet – and may have provided the blueprint for a decade of domination
 
 
GamesRadar's best of 2025 series featuring Blue Prince
Blue Prince is a "true hybrid" of video and boardgame genius, and its creator thought it'd be "niche of niche"
 
 
Fallout season 2
Fallout season 2 Easter eggs and cameos: All the nods to New Vegas that you might have missed
 
 
Best sports games of 2025, including College Football 26
From College Football 26 to WWE 2K25 via Rematch, the best sports games of 2025 kept us playing
 
 
Amanda Christine as Ronnie in It: Welcome to Derry episode 7
It: Welcome to Derry features the scariest scene of the year, and Pennywise is only part of the horrors
 
 
Fallout season 2 poster
I've played every Fallout game, and these are the best Fallout NPCs I want to see in the Amazon show
 
 
  1. Key art for Skate Story showing the glass skater boarding through a dark underworld filled with spikes towards a door of light
    1
    Skate Story review: "A beautiful and unique skateboarding game with great, stylized visuals set in a grungy underworld"
  2. 2
    Octopath Traveler 0 review: "The strongest entry in this retro-styled JRPG series yet, I love the greater focus on tactical battles"
  3. 3
    Sleep Awake review: "An all-timer horror premise is let down by tired stealth that I feel like I'm sleepwalking through"
  4. 4
    Metroid Prime 4: Beyond review: "The series' atmosphere has never been better, while being dragged down by a boring overworld and clunky psychic powers"
  5. 5
    Routine review: "This imperfect but wonderfully atmospheric moon-based horror leaves a strong impression"
  1. Oona Chaplin as Varang in Avatar: Fire and Ash
    1
    Avatar: Fire and Ash review: "Still a technical marvel, with some of the year's best action filmmaking"
  2. 2
    Five Nights at Freddy's 2 review: "We have waited two years for a Five Nights at Freddy's 1.5"
  3. 3
    Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery review: "Brings Knives Out back to its roots for a sequel that's almost on a par with the original"
  4. 4
    Wicked: For Good review: "Builds to an incredibly cathartic conclusion, but isn't quite as captivating as Part 1"
  5. 5
    The Running Man review: "Some fun action and Glen Powell's star power aren't enough to energize this disappointing Stephen King adaptation"
  1. Power Armor in Fallout season 2
    1
    Fallout season 2 review: "A hell of a lot of fun despite being overcrowded and convoluted"
  2. 2
    Stranger Things season 5 volume 1 review: “Can the Duffer brothers stick the landing? It’s sure looking like they will”
  3. 3
    Pluribus season 1 review: "Easily one of the year's best dramas"
  4. 4
    The Witcher season 4 review: "The Henry Cavill-less fourth season is the best yet"
  5. 5
    IT: Welcome to Derry review: "A supremely confident step back into the history of Stephen King's cursed town and killer clown"

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...