James Mottram
Page 3

‘One Battle After Another’ review: dude, where’s my revolution?
Leonardo DiCaprio gets baked and battered in Paul Thomas Anderson’s new high-octane romp

‘Ebony & Ivory’ is the wild, untrue story behind the Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder classic
Director Jim Hosking and composer Andrew Hung on their not-a-stoner comedy that plays loose with history

‘Materialists’ review: prepare to fall head over heels for this smart, sexy rom-com
Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans create a love-triangle that’s impossible to resist

Alex Lawther is ready to take on the Xenomorph in ‘Alien’ prequel ‘Earth’
The former teen actor is adding another huge franchise to his CV

‘Happy Gilmore 2’ review: Adam Sandler chips in with a crowd-pleasing cameo-filled caper
It’s a comfy, charming revival of one of his most iconic characters

How Michael C. Hall resurrected ‘Dexter’: “He craves redemption”
After being left for dead at the end of 2021's mini-series 'New Blood', the world's favourite TV murderer is back

‘Ballerina’ review: Ana De Armas leads fun but forgettable John Wick spin-off
The fast-rising actress kicks and punches her way through this bruising beat 'em up

Wes Anderson on ‘The Phoenician Scheme’ and where he’s going next: “England”
Our fave indie auteur details his globe-trotting travels

‘Sinners’ review: sink your teeth into Ryan Coogler’s bloodthirsty blues horror
Michael B. Jordan plays twin brothers returning to the Deep South in this devilishly good period piece

‘Shōgun’s Cosmo Jarvis on the gritty ‘Warfare’ and Christopher Nolan’s’ ‘Odyssey’: “There’s always more to do”
From scrappy folk singer to working on some of the biggest projects around, Jarvis tells NME how he’s just getting started

‘Black Mirror’ season seven post-watch guide: trivia, set secrets and more
Spoilers galore and clever little references to satisfy the Brooker-ian completist in you

‘Black Mirror’ season seven review: Charlie Brooker’s twisted universe at its most absorbing
Six brilliant episodes that will make you laugh, cry and cower in fear