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
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
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)
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)
The cast of Gen V season 2
Streaming Services The best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Disney Plus, Amazon Prime Video, and more
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)
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
Benedict Cumberbatch in The Roses
Streaming Services 6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (November 21-23)
Gen V
Streaming Services 6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (September 19 - 21)
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
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)
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
(L to R) Gaten Matarazzo as Dustin Henderson, Finn Wolfhard as Mike Wheeler, Caleb McLaughlin as Lucas Sinclair, and Noah Schnapp as Will Byers in Stranger Things 5.
Streaming Services 6 of the best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Disney Plus, Prime Video, and more (November 24–November 30)
Rhea Seehorn as Carol standing in a yard in Pluribus.
Streaming Services From The Fantastic Four: First Steps to Pluribus, these are the best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Prime Video, Disney Plus, 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
Gary Oldman in Slow Horses season 5
Streaming Services 6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (September 26 - 28)
Trending
  • Best Netflix Movies
  • Best movies on Disney Plus
  • Movie Release Dates
  • Best Netflix Shows
  1. Entertainment
  2. Movies
  3. Action Movies

Movies to watch this week at the cinema: Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, Lady Macbeth, and more

Features
By Total Film Staff published 24 April 2017

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

Out on Friday 28 April

Out on Friday 28 April

James Gunn's ragtag gang return with a new soundtrack. Florence Pugh plays a damsel sold into marriage. Katell Quillévéré mixes forensic realism with life-affirming lyricism. Oscar Isaac’s medical student gets involved in a love triangle.

Yes, here's this week's new releases. Click on for our reviews of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, Lady Macbeth, Heal the Living, The Promise, A Moving Image, and Suntan.

For the best movie reviews, subscribe to Total Film.

Page 1 of 7
Page 1 of 7
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

Expectation is a peculiar thing. Positioned as the underdog of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, 2014’s Guardians of the Galaxy blew away unsuspecting audiences with its unique, ragtag line-up, banging vintage soundtrack, expansive universe and tactile aesthetic.

So whatever Vol. 2 comes up with, it lacks the element of surprise, and that crucial freshness that made Vol. 1 stand out in the MCU. While Vol. 2 is consistently praiseworthy – it’s perfectly entertaining, frequently hilarious, occasionally thrilling – it falls short of the original in ways that are hard to ignore.

Picking up shortly after where the first film left off, the beginning sees the Guardians capitalising on their world-saving credentials as mercenaries for hire. They haven’t changed much in the brief interim period, with the exception that Baby Groot (somehow still voiced by Vin Diesel) is now toddling around. We join them on a mission to protect The Sovereign – a golden-skinned species desperate to maintain the purity of their shimmering kind – from a tentacular beast on the attack.

The opening sequence in which the quintet tackle this monster is bold and brilliant and so very Guardians in a way the rest of the film never quite measures up to. The gang collect their payment – prisoner Nebula (Karen Gillan) – but it’s not long before Rocket (voiced by Bradley Cooper) has offended Sovereign Priestess Ayesha (Elizabeth Debicki), whose gilded minions will chase Peter ‘Star-Lord’ Quill and co. throughout the movie. Debicki’s gaudy epidermis and imposing throne are among many of the movie’s spectacular flourishes in the costume, make-up and production design departments.

Vol. 2 establishes several plot threads early on which take some time to cohere. In a pre-credits sequence set in Missouri, 1980, we have a glimpse of the romance between Peter’s mother and his mysterious father (an impressively digitally de-aged Kurt Russell).

When an older, beardier Russell catches up with Peter in present-day outer space, he reveals himself to be Ego, the living planet, a celestial being who sent an avatar of himself out to explore the universe. His companion, Mantis (Pom Klementieff), is a bug-eyed humanoid whose antennae give her empathic powers that she uses to read others’ feelings.

If that’s already sounding like a lot of characters to juggle in one movie, we haven’t even mentioned the increased role that the Ravagers play this time around. Even at two hours-plus, it’s a lot to fit in, and many of the characters inevitably get short shrift, including Chris Pratt’s Peter, who sometimes feels sidelined in his own family saga.

It helps that we already know the characters pretty well, and the actors continue to inhabit them with charm, warmth and humour. Pratt still has a mean line in quips and a roguish charisma, and fans will delight in seeing the gang back on the big screen, even if they’re split up for a fair chunk of the running time.

Vol. 2 is also very funny, boasting a consistent strike rate of witty one-liners. The pop-culture references and another spot-on soundtrack ensure the series retains its unique personality. Man-mountain Drax (Dave Bautista) bags even more of the best lines this time around, and some of the film’s strongest character scenes emerge from his interactions with Mantis.

Klementieff is absolutely terrific, and easily the film’s best new addition. She has an ethereal otherworldliness that feels genuinely special, and is a reminder of the unexpected surprises Vol. 1 dished out liberally. Karen Gillan also gets a little more screen time to flesh out badass blue baldie Nebula, even if her troubled relationship with adoptive sister Gamora (Zoe Saldana, underused) doesn’t quite have the heft you hope for.

The action is bigger and bolder this time around, with a couple of very impressively staged set-pieces showcasing writer/director/mixtape-compiler James Gunn’s visual imagination, as jet packs, Warhammer-scale weaponry and countless spaceships are deployed with panache.

Given that Gunn presumably had far more budget to play with after the first film, the locations and set pieces are more ambitious than before, but as a result they’re largely CGI creations. As trippily colourful as the landscapes are, it’s hard not to yearn for more of the tangible, lived-in settings that made the first film feel so grounded. The climax, in particular, suffers from the CGI deluge that seems to be the obligatory way to finish blockbusters these days.

Perhaps the most welcome surprise of Vol. 1 – and the thing that truly separated it from its MCU stablemates – was just how emotional it was. Can anyone even think about “We are Groot” without getting a little bit choked up? Vol. 2 has a couple of moments that attempt to recapture that magic, but they don’t quite land as impactfully as before.

It’s not that this film doesn’t have much to admire in it – it trounces recent blockbusters like Fast & Furious 8 and Kong: Skull Island in terms of character and invention, for example – but fans are more likely to be carried along by their goodwill towards the gang than this film’s own merits. It’s just not a patch on the first one. Expectation is a fricking nightmare, isn’t it?

THE VERDICT: This sequel turns up the volume on the action and spectacle for a fun and frequently thrilling ride, but can’t help but feel like a disappointment in comparison to its predecessor.

Director: James Gunn; Starring:  Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista, Vin Diesel, Bradley Cooper, Michael Rooker, Karen Gillan; Theatrical release: April 28, 2017 

Matt Maytum

Page 2 of 7
Page 2 of 7
Lady Macbeth

Lady Macbeth

After lending eye-catching support to The Falling, Florence Pugh triumphantly takes centre stage in this austere adaptation, not of Shakespeare, but of an 1865 Russian novel by Nikolai Leskov.

That William Oldroyd’s feature debut more than holds its own is a testament to the riveting intensity of Alice Birch’s script, the unsettling rigidity of Ari Wegner’s cinematography and most of all to Pugh, whose portrayal of a 19th Century damsel sold into marriage is a tour de force.

Shunned by her impotent new husband (Paul Hilton) and denied permission to even leave the house by his tyrannical dad (Christopher Fairbank), Pugh’s Katherine is inevitably drawn to the first hunky stablehand (Cosmo Jarvis) who crosses her path.

As virginal naiveté gives way to sensual abandon, thoughts turn towards murder – a grim descent Birch subtly paints as both the inevitable consequence of Katherine’s sexual awakening being checked and as an act of feminist empowerment.

Shot in Northumberland for under £500,000, Oldroyd’s film has a cogency and a fearlessness that automatically set it apart from most costume dramas. In Pugh, meanwhile, it has a home-grown star who’s clearly going places.

THE VERDICT: Madame Bovary meets Thérèse Raquin with a splash of Lady Chatterley in a pared-down drama that packs a real punch.

Director: William Oldroyd; Starring: Florence Pugh, Cosmo Jarvis, Paul Hilton, Christopher Fairbank; Theatrical release: April 28, 2017

Neil Smith

Page 3 of 7
Page 3 of 7
Heal the Living

Heal the Living

A surf-mad teenager (Gabin Verdet). A doctor with a love of birds (Tahar Rahim). An ailing mother-of-two (Anne Dorval). Just three of the characters in Katell Quillévéré’s multi-stranded Le Havre-set drama.

Aided by Alexandre Desplat’s resonant score, Quillévéré mixes forensic realism with life-affirming lyricism. Sadly, the final pay-off isn’t the emotional crescendo you’ll want.

Director: Katell Quillevere; Starring: Tahar Rahim, Emmanuelle Seogner, Anne Dorval; Theatrical release: April 28, 2017

James Mottram

Page 4 of 7
Page 4 of 7
The Promise

The Promise

A romance set against the Armenian genocide at the end of the Ottoman Empire, The Promise is well-intentioned but heavy-handed. Oscar Isaac’s Armenian medical student falls for Ana (Charlotte Le Bon, insipid), who’s betrothed to American journo Christopher (Christian Bale, reliably intense).

The first hour is so soapy you could wash your laundry in it, but it gets more affecting.

Director: Terry George; Starring: Oscar Isaac, Charlotte Le Bon, Christian Bale; Theatrical release: April 28, 2017

Matt Maytum

Page 5 of 7
Page 5 of 7
A Moving Image

A Moving Image

Not quite a drama, but not exactly a doc either, Shola Amoo’s film mixes interviews and footage of real Brixton residents with a fictional story about a young artist (Tanya Fear) making her own ‘visual art project’ exploring the area’s gentrification.

The complexity of the topic is well handled, and Brixton itself is full of vibrancy, but the film prompts more questions than it manages to answer.

Director: Argyris Papadimitropoulos; Starring: Makis Papadimitriou, Elli Tringou, Milou Van Groessen, Dimi Hart, Hara Kotsali; Theatrical release: April 28, 2017

Stephen Puddicombe

Page 6 of 7
Page 6 of 7
Suntan

Suntan

“Some bronze, others burn,” runs the snappy tagline of this tale of male romantic obsession from Greek writer-director Argyris Papadimitropoulos (Wasted Youth).

On the small island of Antiparos, morose middle-aged doctor Kostis (Makis Papadimitriou) becomes infatuated with beautiful tourist Anna (Elli Tringou). Troubling but compelling, this unflinching thriller deftly builds to its chilling conclusion.

Director: Argyris Papadimitropoulos; Starring: Makis Papadimitriou, Elli Tringou, Milou Van Groessen, Dimi Hart, Hara Kotsali; Theatrical release: April 28, 2017

Tom Dawson

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. 

Read more
Wednesday season 2 part 2 Gwendoline Christie
The best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Disney Plus, Paramount Plus, and more
 
 
Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein in Frankenstein
6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (November 7-9)
 
 
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)
 
 
The cast of Gen V season 2
The best new shows and movies streaming this week on Netflix, Disney Plus, Amazon Prime Video, and more
 
 
A House of Dynamite
6 new movies and shows to watch this weekend on Netflix, Prime, Disney Plus, and more (October 24-26)
 
 
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
 
 
Latest in Action Movies
Dwayne Johnson stares down with Dominic Toretto in Fast Five
Vin Diesel buries the hatchet with Fast and Furious co-star Dwayne Johnson for good in emotional post: "[We] created something unforgettable"
 
 
Sadie Sink as Max Mayfield in Stranger Things 4
Stranger Things star Sadie Sink hints that she's not playing Mary Jane in Marvel's Spider-Man 4: "I'm excited for it to be put to rest"
 
 
Hugh Jackman as Wolverine in Deadpool and Wolverine
Hugh Jackman is "never saying never" about returning to the MCU as Wolverine, but also jokes "they have enough for an AI version of me"
 
 
The Beast in the post-credits scene of The Marvels
X-Men actor Kelsey Grammer says too much and reveals the MCU heroes and villains he will be sharing scenes with in Avengers: Doomsday
 
 
Batman and some bats in Batman Begins
Christopher Nolan almost came close to directing an ancient epic before The Odyssey, but got Batman Begins instead
 
 
Noah Centineo close to boarding Gundam movie with Sydney Sweeney
 
 
Latest in Features
Noah Schnapp in Stranger Things season 5
Stranger Things season 5 volume 1 ending explained: who dies and how those huge revelations set up volume 2
 
 
Nick, Gary, and Judy in Zootopia 2
The Zootropolis 2 team on bringing reptiles into the Disney sequel, and why new character Gary De'Snake is the movie's Yoda
 
 
Hot 25 hero image showing multiple video games coming out in 2026
Hot 25: Fall 2025 Edition
 
 
The Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion Remastered
I turned every Oblivion NPC into a sheep and broke the game, but I can only blame myself
 
 
Arc Raiders automaton medical vendor Lance
Arc Raiders has a weird problem for a shooter: the worst guns in the game are really good
 
 
(L to R) Gaten Matarazzo as Dustin Henderson, Finn Wolfhard as Mike Wheeler, Caleb McLaughlin as Lucas Sinclair, and Noah Schnapp as Will Byers in Stranger Things 5.
Binge-watching the whole of Stranger Things before season 5 hits Netflix may not have been the best idea, as now I have to watch my favorite characters die
 
 
  1. Escape from Tarkov review
    1
    Escape from Tarkov review: "An extraction shooter that will make you truly miserable if you let it, but can offer dizzying highs you won't find elsewhere"
  2. 2
    Fans think this is the best strategy board game ever made, and I have to admit that they've got a point
  3. 3
    Constance review: "If Hollow Knight: Silksong seems too daunting, this wonderful paint powered adventure should do nicely"
  4. 4
    This enthralling team board game is perfect for playing with family this Thanksgiving
  5. 5
    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"
  1. Josh O'Connor and Daniel Craig in Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
    1
    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"
  2. 2
    Wicked: For Good review: "Builds to an incredibly cathartic conclusion, but isn't quite as captivating as Part 1"
  3. 3
    The Running Man review: "Some fun action and Glen Powell's star power aren't enough to energize this disappointing Stephen King adaptation"
  4. 4
    Predator: Badlands review: "Die-hard fans may be disappointed, but as a blockbuster action-adventure, Badlands kills it"
  5. 5
    Chainsaw Man – The Movie: Reze Arc review "Storytelling just as compelling as the chainsaws, devils, and visually excessive fight scenes"
  1. Noah Schnapp as Will Byers and Jamie Campbell Bower as Vecna in Stranger Things season 5
    1
    Stranger Things season 5 volume 1 review: “Can the Duffer brothers stick the landing? It’s sure looking like they will”
  2. 2
    Pluribus season 1 review: "Easily one of the year's best dramas"
  3. 3
    The Witcher season 4 review: "The Henry Cavill-less fourth season is the best yet"
  4. 4
    IT: Welcome to Derry review: "A supremely confident step back into the history of Stephen King's cursed town and killer clown"
  5. 5
    Splinter Cell: Deathwatch review: "A pale imitation of the long-dormant stealth franchise"

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...