‘One Life’ movie review: Anthony Hopkins brilliant in story of ‘British Schindler’ Nicholas Winton
This story of the man who helped transport 669 Jewish children from Prague on the eve of WWII is straightforwardly told, but deeply moving.
This story of the man who helped transport 669 Jewish children from Prague on the eve of WWII is straightforwardly told, but deeply moving.
One Life, which stars Anthony Hopkins and filmed in Prague in 2022, will premiere in Czech cinemas early next month.
Anthony Hopkins’ heartfelt performance and an emotional finale have been highlighted for the film, which partially shot in Prague last fall.
One Life, which filmed in Prague last autumn, will have its world premiere at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival in September.
Helena Bonham Carter, Jonathan Pryce, and Lena Olin have joined the cast of the WWII biopic about the “British Schindler”
Anson Mount plays a charismatic killer in this assassin feature co-starring Abbie Cornish, Eddie Marsan, and David Morse
Hopkins and Johnny Flynn will both portray the Holocaust hero at different stages in his life in the new project, shooting in Prague from April
Director Taika Waititi injects some eccentric humor into the Marvel Universe, resulting in the best Thor movie to date
This wackadoodle sequel goes light on the Hasbro toy robot action and heavy on the centuries-spanning Arthurian legend backstory
Darren Aronofsky’s Noah takes the story of the Ark and goes nuts with it – it’s the Old Testament for the Transformers generation
Thor: The Dark World gets that mostly right, too, and exhibits (in spurts) the same goofy charm of the original
Red 2 is better written and staged than its predecessor, lighter and funnier, with more coherent action scenes and an expanded cast
Hitchcock is an especially disappointing film that doesn’t do justice to the titular director or his films, particularly Psycho
NOW STREAMING ON: Thor, a big-screen adaptation of the Marvel comic about the Norse god of thunder, comes with unusually high pedigree; not every comic
The Rite comes from the basis of something real, but it has only been used to inspire a conventional Hollywood product
You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger is an unusually light comedy that recalls some of Woody Allen’s 1970s output.
The Wolfman, a more or less straight-faced remake of the 1941 Universal horror film, is not a particularly good movie
There’s a level of art in Beowolf sorely missing from most computer-generated animation
Fracture reels us in with a can’t-miss premise only to slowly lose us over the course of the rest of the film