Skip to main content
  • TotalFilm
  • Edge
  • Newsarama
  • Retrogamer
GamesRadar+ GamesRadar+
US EditionUS CA EditionCanada UK EditionUK AU EditionAustralia
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • More
    • PS5
    • Xbox Series X
    • Nintendo Switch
    • Nintendo Switch 2
    • PC
    • Platforms
    • Tabletop Gaming
    • Comics
    • Toys & Collectibles
    • Newsarama
    • Retro Gamer
    • Newsletters
    • About us
    • Features
Trending
  • Best Netflix Movies
  • Movie Release Dates
  • Best movies on Disney Plus
  • Best Netflix Shows
Don't miss these
Jeff Ward as Buggy and Iñaki Godoy as Monkey D. Luffy in season 2 of One Piece.
Streaming Services 6 of the best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Prime Video, Hulu, and more (March 9–March 15)
Atmosphere at the 98th Oscars Governors Ball preview held at The Ray Dolby Ballroom on March 10, 2026 in Los Angeles, California.
Streaming Services How to watch The Oscars for free, your guide to live streaming the Academy Awards around the world
Michael B. Jordan in Ryan Coogler's vampire horror Sinners
Drama Movies Oscars 2026 live coverage: All the winners, red carpet, and the 97th Academy Awards' biggest moments – as it happens
Louis Theroux in new documentary Inside the Manosphere
Streaming Services 3 new to Netflix movies I recommend you watch this weekend (March 14–March 15)
Dune 2
Movies Upcoming movies: The most exciting new movies coming in 2026 and beyond
Cillian Murphy as Tommy in Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man.
Movies The 25 best movies on Netflix to watch right now
The Lion King is undoubtedly one of the best movies on Disney Plus
Movies The 30 best movies on Disney Plus to watch right now
Marlon Brando as Vito Corleone in The Godfather.
Streaming Services The 20 best movies on Paramount Plus to watch right now
Scarlett Johansson as DeeAnna Moran in Hail, Caesar!
Streaming Services 3 new to Prime Video movies you need to watch this weekend (March 13–March 15)
(L to R) Steven Yeun as Detective Mike Ro, Matt Damon as Lieutenant Dane Dumars, Ben Affleck as Detective Sergeant J.D. Byrne, and Kyle Chandler as DEA Agent Mateo 'Matty' Nix in The Rip.
Action Movies The 25 best Netflix action movies to watch right now
Barry Keoghan as Duke Shelby walking in Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man
Streaming Services The best new shows and movies streaming on Netflix, Prime Video, HBO Max, and more (Mar 16–Mar 22)
For All Mankind
Apple TV Plus The 25 best shows on Apple TV to watch right now
Best anime movies: Chihiro and No-Face sitting in a train carriage during Spirited Away.
Anime Movies The 30 best anime movies to watch right now
Sonic, Tails, and Knuckles in Sonic 3
Amazon Prime Video The 25 best movies on Prime Video to watch right now
Tom Hanks as Commander Ernie Krause during one of the best Apple TV movies, Greyhound.
Apple TV Plus The 10 best movies on Apple TV to stream right now
  1. Entertainment
  2. Movies

Movies to watch this week at the cinema: Kingsman: The Golden Circle, Borg vs McEnroe, and more

Features
By Total Film Staff published 18 September 2017

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

Out on Friday September 22

Out on Friday September 22

Matthew Vaughn brings the Kingsman back for a sequel. Shia stars in the first truly great tennis movie. An offally appealing arthouse tale of elusive love. A David Lean masterpiece returns to cinemas.

Yes, here's this week's new releases. Click on for our reviews of Kingsman: The Golden Circle, Borg vs McEnroe, On Body and Soul, In Between, Lawrence of Arabia, and Our Last Tango.

For the best movie reviews, subscribe to Total Film.

Page 1 of 7
Page 1 of 7
Kingsman: The Golden Circle

Kingsman: The Golden Circle

A sequel to 2014’s Kingsman: The Secret Service was an inevitable but welcome prospect. After all, that film did for spies what Kick-Ass did for comic-book superheroes, and raked in more than $400m worldwide. Director Matthew Vaughn and writer Jane Goldman adhered only loosely to Mark Millar’s comic source material first time out, and here they have free rein to go in whichever direction they want.

It’s a shame then that it’s played so safe, lacking the edge that made the first film memorable. It starts well enough, with a deliriously OTT scrap inside a London cab, as Eggsy (Taron Egerton) fends off a familiar assailant. Inventively shot and breathlessly paced, it’s an energising opening that’s brimming with Bond-turned-up-to-11 gusto, swagger and gadgetry.

There are a couple more brash set-pieces to enjoy later, but it’s a while before the pace picks up again, and the main plotline – our hero is forced to go rogue when a crime syndicate targets his fellow Kingsmen – is the well-trodden terrain of recent 007 and Ethan Hunt missions.

Teaming up with Kingsman’s tech support, Merlin (Mark Strong, ever-reliable), Eggsy follows a clue that leads him to a whiskey distillery in the American South, a front for the US-equivalent of Kingsman. Led by Jeff Bridges’ Champ and Channing Tatum’s Tequila, the Statesmen are a welcome addition to the fold, though it’s hard not to mask the impression that Bridges and Tatum were only available for a couple of days’ shooting.

It’s through the Statesmen that Eggsy discovers his presumed-dead former mentor, Harry Hart (Colin Firth), seemingly alive and well. The role fits Firth like a made-to-measure Oxford shoe, but the manner of his return is a bit of a letdown, given the secrecy that has surrounded it. It’s another ‘too safe’ moment in a film that should have taken more risks.

Julianne Moore is great fun as Poppy, a drug kingpin – Vaughn describes her as “Martha Stewart on crack” – holed up in an Americana-styled lair in the Cambodian jungle. But her masterplan stretches credulity in this comic-book world’s internal logic. Nabbing the biggest laughs of all is a very well-deployed Elton John. Mercifully, this is one sequel that hasn’t gone darker. The cast uniformly emit full-beam charm, so it’s never a chore to be in their company.

More problematic is the lack of any real arc this time around. The lad-to-lord transition of the first film is sorely missed, as is the contrast between Eggsy’s working-class background and the highfalutin Secret Service. The Transatlantic team-up just doesn’t offer the same zing. As a result, The Golden Circle often feels precisely tailored when it should’ve been cut a little looser.

THE VERDICT: Fun, fleeting entertainment if you’re after more of the same, but fails to carve out any fresh ground.

Director: Matthew Vaughn; Starring: Taron Egerton, Colin Firth, Julianne Moore, Channing Tatum, Mark Strong; Theatrical release: September 20, 2017

Matt Maytum

Page 2 of 7
Page 2 of 7
Borg vs McEnroe

Borg vs McEnroe

Calling Borg vs McEnroe the first truly great tennis movie may seem like damning with faint praise considering the competition – Paul Bettany/Kirsten Dunst romcom Wimbledon (2004) and… er, that’s about it. But it’s a statement meant at face value.

Exploring the rivalry between imperturbable world number one Björn Borg and volatile contender, John McEnroe, in the lead-up to their legendary 1980 Wimbledon final, it’s a clash of the tennis titans that’s infatuated with the formative psychology of sporting icons off the court.

In 1980, Björn Borg (Sverrir Gudnason) was at the top of his game, and on course to win a record fifth consecutive Wimbledon title. But behind the sweat bands it was a different story. Pre-match superstitions increasingly alienate his nearest and dearest, while suppressed childhood anger issues threaten to derail Borg’s dominance of the sport he’s dedicated his life to.

In contrast, McEnroe (Shia LaBeouf) is a firecracker. Wearing his heart on his sleeve, his explosive tantrums make him an easy target for the controversy-hungry media and public, who delight in openly booing him. The pair are perfectly matched combatants – the baseline player and the net rusher, the hot-headed American and nitrogen-cool Swede, the Ice Borg and the Super Brat.

Director Janus Metz (Armadillo) has previous form with the all-time-great tennis rivalry: he helmed an episode of ’90s documentary series Clash of the Titans on Borg and McEnroe, and reunites with writer Ronnie Sandahl for a film that lasers in on the moments that made the men.

The movie jumps back and forth between the 1980 Wimbledon championship and the pair in their youth: Borg is seen learning to keep his career-threatening temper under control, while the source of McEnroe’s rage is left to fester. The thesis: maybe the famous rivals aren’t so different after all.

It’s a compelling case study, and effectively burrows under the skin of Borg in particular. Methodically paced and shot, it perfectly straddles a line between arthouse sensibility and mainstream subject matter, with the match of the century providing a racket-string-tense climax.

But there’s a reason why Borg comes first in that dichotomous title. Sandahl and Metz are enamoured with their Scandi cousin at McEnroe’s expense, dedicating a much meatier chunk of screentime to the Swede. And sops to the tennis-oblivious can come across as patronising.

Not quite a Grand Slam then, but ace nonetheless.

THE VERDICT: A superior sports biopic with a never-better LaBeouf? You cannot be serious! But it only fully gets to grips with the ice-cool Swede.

Director: Janus Metz; Starring: Shia LaBeouf, Stellan Skarsgard, Sverrir Gudnason; Theatrical release: September 22, 2017

Jordan Farley

Page 3 of 7
Page 3 of 7
On Body and Soul

On Body and Soul

More about sweetbreads than sweet nothings, this offbeat but absorbing Hungarian love story (the Golden Bear winner at this year’s Berlin Film Festival) nimbly combines arthouse dreaminess with brutal everyday realities. Possibly the only cinema romance featuring unflinching abattoir action, its tale of lonely Budapest slaughterhouse managers discovering a mystic connection is weirdly compelling.

Veteran director Ildikó Enyedi’s slow-burn dramedy is languorously paced but full of emotional suspense. Heavyweight themes such as loneliness, human-animal bonds and longing are explored with a lightness of touch. Mixing in unexpected elements including a police search for stolen cattle Viagra, a menacing love rival and heart-in-mouth tragi-comedy, Enyedi keeps things unpredictable and deploys an austere, unassumingly beautiful visual style to ensure the genre-mix meshes neatly. 

Moody middle-aged exec Endre (a deliciously deadpan Géza Morcsányi) and newcomer Alexandra Borbély’s shy meat inspector are touchingly understated, torn between desire and despair at their daytime awkwardness together. Get your chops around this.

THE VERDICT: This offally appealing arthouse tale of elusive love in an abattoir is a prime-cut, for the strong-of-stomach.

Director: Ildikó Enyedi; Starring: Géza Morcsányi, Alexandra Borbély, Zoltán Schneider; Theatrical release: September 22, 2017

Kate Stables

Page 4 of 7
Page 4 of 7
In Between

In Between

The personal is the political in Maysaloun Hamoud’s vibrant, taboo-breaking debut feature, tracking the lives of three young Palestinian-Israeli women – hard-partying lawyer Laila (Mouna Hawa), lesbian DJ Salma (Sana Jammelieh) and devout student Nour (Shaden Kanboura).

The film reveals how patriarchal values clash with the desires of its female characters to lead more emancipated lives.

Director: Maysaloun Hamoud; Starring: Mouna Hawa, Sana Jammelieh, Shaden Kanboura; Theatrical release: September 22, 2017

Tom Dawson

Page 5 of 7
Page 5 of 7
Lawrence of Arabia

Lawrence of Arabia

From Freddie Young’s epic 70mm cinematography and Maurice Jarre’s majestic score to Robert Bolt’s brilliant script and Peter O’Toole’s complex lead performance, this stirring recreation of T.E. Lawrence’s WW1 desert exploits is a ravishing tour de force.

It combines an astute character study with some of the most jaw-dropping images captured on film.

Director: David Lean; Starring: Peter O'Toole, Alec Guinness, Anthony Quinn; Theatrical release: September 22, 2017

Neil Smith

Page 6 of 7
Page 6 of 7
Our Last Tango

Our Last Tango

German Kral directs a thrilling docu-musical about Argentine tango stars María Nieves Rego and Juan Carlos Copes, who waltzed to global fame over almost 50 years together even as their marriage fell apart.

Interviews are entwined with dance numbers dramatising key moments in the couple’s life: the result is giddy, meta and soulful, even if the melancholic beats get a little repetitive in the final act.

Director: German Kral; Starring: María Nieves Rego, Juan Carlos Copes, Melina Brutman; Theatrical release: September 22, 2017

Tim Coleman

Page 7 of 7
Page 7 of 7
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. 

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Flipboard
  • Email
Share this article
Join the conversation
Follow us
Add us as a preferred source on Google
Get the GamesRadar+ Newsletter

Bringing all the latest movie news, features, and reviews to your inbox


By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

You are now subscribed

Your newsletter sign-up was successful


An account already exists for this email address, please log in.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Read more
Sonic, Tails, and Knuckles in Sonic 3
Amazon Prime Video The 25 best movies on Prime Video to watch right now
 
 
Cillian Murphy as Tommy in Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man.
Movies The 25 best movies on Netflix to watch right now
 
 
Marlon Brando as Vito Corleone in The Godfather.
Streaming Services The 20 best movies on Paramount Plus to watch right now
 
 
Keanu Reeves as FBI Agent Johnny Utah and Patrick Swayze as Bodhi "Bodhisattva" in the movie Point Break.
Hulu The best movies on Hulu to watch right now
 
 
Viola Davis as General Nanisca in The Woman King.
Streaming Services 3 new to Prime Video movies you should watch this weekend (February 21–22)
 
 
Stellan Skarsgård and Elle Fanning as Gustav and Rachel in Sentimental Value
Drama Movies Elle Fanning and Stellan Skarsgård discuss unlikely friendships and avoiding cliche in Sentimental Value
 
 
Latest in Movies
Mortal Kombat movie
Action Movies Mortal Kombat 2 star Lewis Tan responds to new dig from Street Fighter's Cody Rhodes: "Almost spilled my drink laughing"
 
 
Halloween Kills
Horror Movies Halloween star Jamie Lee Curtis says she wouldn't have returned for the Blumhouse sequel if she'd known it was a trilogy
 
 
Pedro Pascal as Din Djarin unmasked in The Mandalorian and Grogu
Star Wars Movies The Mandalorian and Grogu runtime may have been revealed by a UK theater chain listing, but take it with a pinch of salt
 
 
Nick Wilde and Judy Hopps in Zootopia 2
Film Festivals & Awards After missing out KPop Demon Hunters, Disney has made surprising Oscars history with its unlikely losing streak
 
 
Leon frowns in the care center in Resident Evil Requiem
Horror Movies Resident Evil director Zach Cregger proves he's the right person for the job after beating Requiem twice already
 
 
Tim Roth as Beckett reading with his feet on a desk in Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man
Crime Movies Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man villain Tim Roth starred in The Incredible Hulk to "embarrass" his kids
 
 
Latest in Features
Future Games Show
Games Future Games Show Spring Showcase 2026
 
 
Artwork showing Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced, a remake of Assassin's Creed 4: Black Flag, with protagonist Edward Kenway looking out from the side of ship
Assassin's Creed Assassin's Creed: Black Flag Resynced – Everything you need to know about the Assassin's Creed Black Flag remake
 
 
The Talking Flower toy sitting next to its box.
Toys & Collectibles The Super Mario Talking Flower told me the "ocean tastes like tears" but I like this Nintendo toy
 
 
Resident Evil accessories and merch on a forest background
Toys & Collectibles It's been 30 years since we first entered the Spencer Mansion, so I'm building the ultimate Resident Evil starter kit
 
 
A still from Kiki's Delivery Service featuring Kiki and her feline familiar Jiji flying on a broom with some seagulls, with a Big Screen Spotlight logo ini the corner
Anime Movies Kiki's Delivery Service's return to theaters proves we need hand-drawn animation now more than ever
 
 
In Collector's Cove, the collector protagonist who has short brown hair and wears a jumper with cherries on it hugs the Fable Fin companion who wears a witch hat. GamesRadar+'s Indie Spotlight series logo can be seen in the top right-hand corner
Adventure Games If you're feeling Pokemon Pokopia FOMO, this farming adventure lets you explore on the back of a Lapras-like companion
 
 
LATEST ARTICLES
  1. Nvidia DLSS 5 version of Grace from Resident Evil Requiem
    1
    Bethesda says Nvidia's new DLSS 5 AI filter "will all be under our artists' control, and totally optional for players"
  2. 2
    Daredevil: Born Again season 2 star Matthew Lillard says there's "Cheshire Cat" energy to his new villain
  3. 3
    GTA Wiki splits from Fandom citing "a reportedly pro-AI CEO," "terrible" ads, and censorship
  4. 4
    Bethesda fans are petitioning for The Elder Scrolls 6 to add an NPC honoring a late TES lore legend
  5. 5
    The Last of Us season 3 adds Lanterns and The Conjuring stars to cast

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

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

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...