Movies
Reviews of films available on Netflix UK, Amazon Prime and other video on-demand services.
Netflix for KidsFK film review: The Little Vampire
October 30, 2016 | Nathanael SmithNetflix for Kids is VODzilla.co’s monthly column that sends a grown man without kids into the barrel of the streaming service’s kids catalogue and searches for morsels of goodness at the bottom. Today, our childless adult writer tackles The Little … Read More
Netflix UK film review: I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House
October 29, 2016 | David FarnorDirector: Osgood Perkins Cast: Ruth Wilson, Paula Prentiss Watch I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House only in the UK: Netflix
See our list of the most underrated horror movies on Netflix UK.
“Three days ago, I … Read More
Netflix UK film review: Into the Inferno
October 29, 2016 | Chris BryantWerner Herzog’s documentary is a stunning study of the poetry between religion and ruin.Read More
VOD film review: The Comedian’s Guide to Survival
October 28, 2016 | David FarnorA top-notch supporting cast can’t rescue the unfunny lead of this hit-and-miss comedy.Read More
VOD film review: Let’s Be Evil
October 28, 2016 | Matthew TurnerAn augmented reality project goes horribly wrong in this low budget sci-fi that squanders its big ideas.Read More
VOD film review: After Love
October 28, 2016 | Josh Slater-WilliamsA heated pressure-cooker of a drama.Read More
VOD film review: Desierto
October 24, 2016 | David FarnorThis pro-imigration anti-Western is viscerally exciting and pulsatingly political.Read More
VOD film review: Looking for Eric
October 24, 2016 | David FarnorKnowing, winning, touching, amusing – Loach’s loveable film delivers first class entertainment.Read More
VOD film review: My Scientology Movie
October 24, 2016 | David FarnorA masterful piece of non-fiction filmmaking, My Scientology Movie is hugely entertaining and extremely troubling viewing.Read More
BBC iPlayer review: HyperNormalisation
October 22, 2016 | David FarnorLast year, Adam Curtis delivered Bitter Lake directly into the nation’s eyeballs on BBC iPlayer. It was experimental, challenging, ambitious filmmaking. Now, he’s back with HyperNormalisation, an equally epic piece of TV that proves more accessible than his last work, … Read More