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1. J Edgar: Film Preview
CityLife, Friday 20 January 2012 During a turbulent and contentious term in power spanning almost 50 years, J Edgar Hoover was instrumental in the fight against mounting criminality on the streets of America. -
2. Review: Winnie The Pooh (U)
CityLife, Thursday 14 April 2011 Damon Smith is delighted by the classic character’s new adventure. -
3. Review: The Eagle (12A)
CityLife, Thursday 24 March 2011 Damon Smith is impressed with this adventure set in Roman Britain. -
4. Review: Never Let Me Go (12A)
CityLife, Thursday 10 February 2011 Based on the Booker Prize-nominated novel by Kazuo Ishiguro, Mark Romanek’s bleak film is set in a dystopian future when genetic clones are bred and nurtured to provide vital organs for humans. -
5. Review: Tron: Legacy (PG)
CityLife, Friday 17 December 2010 Return to the digital realm of Steven Lisberger’s cult 1982 adventure in Joseph Kosinski’s hi-tech reboot, which screens in 3D in most cinemas. -
6. Must see: Grimm Up North Festival 2010
CityLife, Friday 29 October 2010 (Dancehouse, to October 31) Manchester’s spooky season is kicked off by a film festival which takes over cinema screens throughout the city to show 25 cult horror films and terror-inducing movie premieres. -
7. Review: Alice In Wonderland (PG)
CityLife, Friday 05 March 2010 Combining a unique aesthetic, conjured from his twisted imagination, with dark humour and heartfelt emotion, Tim Burton has remained a visionary in a sea of profit-driven conformity. -
8. Review: Alice In Wonderland (PG)
CityLife, Friday 05 March 2010 Combining a unique aesthetic, conjured from his twisted imagination, with dark humour and heartfelt emotion, Tim Burton has remained a visionary in a sea of profit-driven conformity. -
9. Review: The Wolfman (15)
CityLife, Friday 12 February 2010 Some of cinema’s most iconic creatures, including Count Dracula, Frankenstein’s monster and The Mummy, hark back to the golden age of Universal Studios in the 1930s and 1940s, when Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi and Claude Rains stalked the big screen with malicious intent. -
10. Review: The Wolfman (15)
CityLife, Friday 12 February 2010 Some of cinema’s most iconic creatures, including Count Dracula, Frankenstein’s monster and The Mummy, hark back to the golden age of Universal Studios in the 1930s and 1940s, when Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi and Claude Rains stalked the big screen with malicious intent.