Alien: Romulus is a back-to-basics experience for those who want "to see the xenomorph again, but in the setting of a pure-blood horror movie"

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EntertainmentMoviesSci-Fi MoviesAlien: RomulusAlien: Romulus is a back-to-basics experience for those who want “to see the xenomorph again, but in the setting of a pure-blood horror movie"When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

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(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

Xenomorph and Cailee Spaeny as Rain Carradine in 20th Century Studios' ALIEN: ROMULUS. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

Alien: Romulusis his answer to that ‘perverse question’ of apples and oranges. Describing the film as “an amalgamation of Alien and Aliens on many levels”, everything from the environmental design to the pacing and the way the returning bestiary of Giger-accurate creatures is utilised in Romulus exists on a spectrum from the shadowy, slow-burn chills of Alien to the muscular, adrenalised thrills of Aliens.

“Every day we were like, ‘What movie are we making today?'” says star Cailee Spaeny (Priscilla, Civil War), who has the unenviable task of following Sigourney Weaver’s Ellen Ripley as the new face of the series, while the xeno-slayer-in-chief is two decades into a peaceful 57-year hypersleep. “‘Are we making Alien or Aliens? What are we going to channel today?’ Because they’re so different in tone.”

The idea to smash together two famously divergent classics is inspired to the point that it’s surprising no one else had thought to do it in almost 40 years. The subsequent sequels may have much in them to recommend, but it’s hard to argue with the fact that the Alien films reached their zenith with the first two instalments. And while the Ridley Scott-directed prequels are ambitious to a fault, the move away from interstellar terror towards more philosophically minded, horror- tinged sci-fi epics left ample room for a stripped-back return to Alien at its most primal.

(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

Cailee Spaeny as Rain Carradine in 20th Century Studios’ ALIEN: ROMULUS. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

TOTAL FILM MAGAZINE(Image credit: Total Film/20th Century Studios/Disney)This article first appeared in Total Film magazine 353. You can buy a copy right here.

TOTAL FILM MAGAZINE

(Image credit: Total Film/20th Century Studios/Disney)This article first appeared in Total Film magazine 353. You can buy a copy right here.

(Image credit: Total Film/20th Century Studios/Disney)

The xenomorph on the cover of Total Film’s Alien: Romulus issue

This article first appeared in Total Film magazine 353. You can buy a copy right here.

“That was what I was missing, in a way,” says Alvarez, who has impressive form reimagining horror classics, having helmed 2013’s vicious Evil Dead remake. “It’s not that there’s no horror in Prometheus and Covenant, but they’re not horror movies. The first one, above all, is a pure horror movie. Like Ridley says, he wanted to do The Texas Chain Saw Massacre in space. That’s what I wanted; to see the xenomorph again, but in the setting of a pure-blood horror movie.”

Following the success of his horror thriller Don’t Breathe, Alvarez found himself informally pitching this vision at Scott’s production company Scott Free in 2017, during a general meeting with the legendary filmmaker. Drawn to the idea of an Alien movie featuring a fresh- faced line-up of xeno-victims-in-waiting, Scott and 20th Century Studios called on Alvarez and frequent collaborator Rodo Sayagues to start work on the script for Romulus several years later, in October 2021.

On their inspiration board throughout the writing process was a picture of Spaeny, who would go on to be cast as Rain Carradine. Speaking from her home in Los Angeles, where framed movie posters adorn the wall – including an Alien quad opposite the sofa – Spaeny recalls an early, formative experience with Scott’s classic. “I have an initial memory of it being on in the house on a Saturday morning, and my dad watching it, and me going, ‘Oh, yeah. What’s this about?'”

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(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

Xenomorph in 20th Century Studios’ ALIEN: ROMULUS. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

I wanted to see the xenomorph again, but in the setting of a pure-blood horror movieFede Alvarez

I wanted to see the xenomorph again, but in the setting of a pure-blood horror movie

Spaeny says, smile widening. “And then the chestburster scene coming up, and me going, ‘Oh my god, I cannot watch this.’ It was so traumatic. But then I’d slowly come back and peek…” Spaeny’s experience closely mirrors that of her co-stars, most of whom (prepare to feel like the desiccated husk of a Space Jockey) weren’t born when the fourth instalment Alien: Resurrection was released in cinemas in 1997, so are catching up on the series many years after the fact. For Alvarez, the idea of centring the story on the series' first 20-something crew stemmed from an early scene in the Special Edition of Aliens in which Hadley’s Hope is glimpsed before the fall, with young children playing in the corridors and riding around on Weyland-Yutani trikes.

“I always thought, ‘Wow, what would it be like for those kids to grow up in a terraforming colony that still needs another 50 years to be habitable?’ You’re probably going to take the same job as your parents. What’s the hope?” questions Alvarez. “Maybe it’s because I’m from Uruguay and the idea of growing up in a place where you know how far you can get, and the things that happen there, and the things that will never happen there. So I always connected with those characters.”

The Kids aren’t alright

(Image credit: Murray Close, 20th Century Studios)

Cailee Spaeny as Rain Carradine and David Jonsson as Andy in 20th Century Studios' ALIEN: ROMULUS. Photo by Murray Close. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

Hope is in desperately short supply on Jackson’s Star, a Weyland-Yutani ‘shake-and-bake’ mining colony shrouded in perpetual night on the dark side of the planet, because there’s no atmosphere (yet) to filter out their sun’s radiation. Surface-bound for her entire life, 20-year-old Rain has never even seen natural light. ‘We’re trying to bring it back to these blue-collar people,’ Spaeny says. “We wanted the heart of it – where these kids came from – to feel authentic, as much as we possibly could.”

Rain’s ex-boyfriend Tyler (Archie Renaux) and Bjorn (Spike Fearn) both work the mines and have a better reason than most to want to leave their futile lives behind. A lifeline arrives in the form of a decommissioned Weyland-Yutani space station – the Renaissance – which is pulled into orbit near Jackson’s Star, offering the potential of a way out for any enterprising scavengers. Key to this mission are Bjorn’s adopted sister Navarro (Aileen Wu) – the technically minded pilot of their rust-bucket vessel Corbelan IV – and Tyler’s ‘sweetheart’ sister Kay (Isabela Merced).

“They’re taking a shot at making their future a little bit better than what it looks like on their home planet,” says Merced, who hasJames Gunn’s Superman (where she’ll appear as Hawkgirl) and the second season of The Last of Us to come in 2025. “They all have that desperation to find a better place. It makes it all the more upsetting and saddening when the movie ends how all Alien movies end…”

Also along for the ride are Rain and her surrogate brother Andy, aka ND-255. An ‘artificial person’, as Bishop would have it, Andy is the closest thing Rain has to family following the death of her parents. Their sibling connection, and the question of whether there can be a true familial love between a human and an android, is the emotional core of the movie according to Alvarez, and is tested under the most extreme circumstances when face-hugging, chest-bursting, pharyngeal-jawed hell inevitably breaks loose aboard the Renaissance. “In the first one, obviously Ripley does not trust synthetics,” says Spaeny. “And it’s switched around where my character is doing everything she can to protect [Andy], because that’s her only family.”

(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

Cailee Spaeny as Rain Carradine in 20th Century Studios' ALIEN: ROMULUS. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

“We’re trying to bring it back to these blue-collar people… we wanted the heart of it to feel authentic"Cailee Spaeny

“We’re trying to bring it back to these blue-collar people… we wanted the heart of it to feel authentic”

“It’s rather beautiful, actually,” adds David Jonsson, the Rye Lane and Industry star making his studio-movie debut with Romulus. “It’s a real first [for the series]. It adds a coming-of-age story. With Alien, you know that there’s space, there’s aliens, and you’ve got to kill them or be killed. Whereas with this wonderful brother-and- sister relationship, there’s so much to play with.”

Standing on the shoulders of giants couldn’t apply more to Spaeny, for whom Ripley loomed large. “I had her performance playing on repeat for months. I was sort of hoping that something would seep in,” Spaeny notes. “But I never felt intimidated. That role wasn’t written for a woman, so there was real freedom. And because Sigourney injected all of herself into it, that then opens up any other female who’s entering this franchise into not ever feeling that weird weight or pressure of playing a female lead.”

Spaeny did allow herself to channel her inner Ripley for at least one scene: the Aliens-homaging moment glimpsed in the film’s first trailer in which Rain steps off a cargo elevator while packing a proto-Pulse Rifle."‘In a shot like that, you’ve got to lean in. You just go, ‘OK. Get those leaf-blowers ready! I’m going to hit that mark as slow as I possibly can,'” she says with a chuckle. “I don’t feel that cool, but it definitely looks cool!”

Keeping it real

(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

Isabela Merced as Kay in 20th Century Studios’ ALIEN: ROMULUS. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

Filming from late March to early July 2023 at Origo Studios in Budapest, on the same colossal soundstages as Dune, Poor Things, and Blade Runner 2049, Alvarez had a specific vision of how to make Alien: Romulus – one that didn’t necessarily tally with the way studio movies are made now. “You always have to pick your battles as a director, and those were the battles he chose to fight,” says Spaeny. “It was: ‘I want this to be as practical as possible. I want to shoot in chronological order. And I want the same craftsmen and artists and puppeteers from the previous movies.'”

“We really went above and beyond to create a world that was exciting for me to be in,” Alvarez says – the opening salvo of a near-10-minute monologue, such is his passion about the film’s practically minded production, starting with the film’s sprawling, interconnected sets. “My movies are a bit of a theme park for the actors,” he explains. “Because I attempt to create as many of the sets as I can, [linked] together, so that you can run through them for a long time – and there’s no blue screens. Everything is a true experience for the actors. Hopefully that will translate to the audience’s experience.”

(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

Cailee Spaeny as Rain Carradine in 20th Century Studios’ ALIEN: ROMULUS. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

RelatedGet ready for Alien: Romulus with our guide onhow to watch the Alien movies in order.

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Get ready for Alien: Romulus with our guide onhow to watch the Alien movies in order.

Get ready for Alien: Romulus with our guide onhow to watch the Alien movies in order.

But nowhere is Alvarez’s commitment to “practical where possible” more evident than with the film’s acid-blooded menagerie, the director claiming that “all the creatures were built, and they worked”. Bluntly citing a desire to move away from the “jumpy ninja shit” that an all-CG xeno allows for, Alvarez assembled a dream team of collaborators, including Shane Mahan and Alec Gillis – special-effects veterans who worked on Aliens early in their careers. In the face of financial sense, which dictates that one company handle all the work at a discounted rate, Alvarez split the labour: Mahan’s Legacy Effects was responsible for all xenomorph matters, Gillis’ Studio Gillis worked on chestburster and egg effects, and Richard Taylor’s team at Weta Workshop handled the concept design of the facehuggers and weapons manufacturing.

“We had an R.C. facehugger that you could drive around,” Alvarez recalls with a smile. “I could chase people around. You’d see it coming, and it looks so fucking real – it was the scariest shit ever. [laughs] We had an animatronic xenomorph as well. Shane built the Queen on Aliens and said, half-jokingly: ‘This time we’re going to get it right.’ Because all these years he’s been thinking about the things he could have done better with the Queen, and how it didn’t quite work.”

Admitting that “it’s way easier to just put up a tennis ball, and sometimes people can’t tell it’s CG”, Alvarez – who has a background in visual effects and had no qualms about using CGI where it would make for a better shot – insisted on practical for “close-up interactions” where “nothing beats the real thing”. Animatronic technology has also evolved exponentially since the mid-80s, meaning that the mechanical xenomorph “could do a lot of things – it could move fast”, according to Alvarez, who also hints at unseen creatures to come.

“There’s other things I cannot tell you about because it’d be a spoiler – and actually it’s what I’m most proud of,” he teases. “There’s a thing in the movie that still, today, is the most fantastical thing I saw that’s part of the creature effects. Every time I watch it in the movie, it almost makes you think that it’s CG because it’s so out there. But it’s not. It’s 100% practical.”

(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

Xenomorph in 20th Century Studios' ALIEN: ROMULUS. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

Sometimes, the solutions were pleasingly old-school. “We also had a guy in a suit,” Alvarez notes, with pride. “You know, sometimes the guy in a suit works perfectly well, and we needed that. There was even a moment where we had a small creature that we needed to do something. I thought it would be great for stop-motion animation, and we brought Phil Tippett in to do it. And Phil was thrilled to do it.”

When CGI did prove necessary “for scope”, shots were carefully conceived to be consistent with the film’s tangible special effects. “We made sure that the CG was built in a way as if it were a practical element so the creatures moved more like an animatronic than a CG creature,” Alvarez points out. The director insists it was necessary to go “above and beyond” in this way, even at the expense of a far more challenging and technical shoot, in service of an experience where immersion for the audience is never broken.

Fear Factor

(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

Isabela Merced as Kay in 20th Century Studios' ALIEN: ROMULUS. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

For the cast, the presence of facehuggers, chestbursters, and xenomorphs on all-encompassing sets may not have helped with their stress levels, but it made for a far more visceral and immediate shoot. “Fede really insisted on us feeling the full spectrum of fear,” Merced recalls. “I actually don’t think the feeling ever got old of seeing a xenomorph in person and up close like that. It really shocked you every time, and sent a chill running up your spine. The details are so amazing.”

“When you’re watching Jurassic Park or Alien or Tremors – that tangible puppet that is there, brings the film to life, in my opinion,” says Spaeny. “And maybe that’s just me, coming from an actor’s perspective. But I hope that audiences will really understand why Fede fought for that, and that it actually does make a difference.”

Alvarez also returned to Alien’s playbook in one other crucial respect – the design of the xenomorph, which is almost entirely consistent with H.R. Giger’s iconic biomechancial vision. Even the domed head, which James Cameron removed for Aliens, has been reinstated. “It is pretty faithful,” says Alvarez. “We’re really trying to take the designs back to the original concept. We do embrace the biomechanical aspects of the creatures that were abandoned at one point. There is something about that that I find fascinating and scarier than if it’s just an organic creature.”

As well as “really trying to embrace the original concepts as close as possible”, Alvarez sought to ground the violence in a way befitting of a modern horror movie. Take the film’s extraordinarily gnarly chestburster scene, which Alvarez equates to the most violent segment of Planet Earth never aired. “It is done almost like a nature documentary,” he says of a sequence which required nine puppeteers to achieve.

“While we were seeing it on set we were joking, and trying to narrate it like Attenborough would. ‘The creature is coming out slow. It’s looking for the scent of the mother…’ The creature’s not trying to be scary. The creature is trying to get the fuck out of that cocoon, that happens to be a person. It’s almost like this is more realistic in a way, but without betraying all the beautiful things of the original designs.”

(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

David Jonsson as Andy in 20th Century Studios' ALIEN: ROMULUS. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

RelatedHere’s our pick of thebest movies and shows to watch before Alien: Romulus.

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Here’s our pick of thebest movies and shows to watch before Alien: Romulus.

Here’s our pick of thebest movies and shows to watch before Alien: Romulus.

“He doesn’t know how to not put that spin on it,” Spaeny notes, referencing Don’t Breathe and his (literally) visceral reimagining of Evil Dead. “That is just his instinct. He’s waiting to do something strange and twisted. And you know he’s got it when you’re right on the edge of going, ‘Should we do this?’ That’s when you know, ‘OK, Fede is in his sweet spot.'”

For Alvarez, the lofty goal with Alien: Romulus is to replicate the impact that the original film, and in particular the chestburster sequence, had on unsuspecting audiences in 1979 – no easy feat at a time when unimaginable horrors are part of an everyday doomscroll. “When you’re young, you just feel so jealous about those stories. You’re like, ‘Oh, man, I wish I could have been there the day no one expected it and the theatre went nuts,'” Alvarez says. “So you want to make sure that it delivers on that promise, that you’ll have people commenting on similar things to their friends, like, ‘Oof, that scene, man. I was there when it happened. I saw it.'”

Myth making

(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

Archie Renaux as Tyler and Cailee Spaeny as Rain Carradine in 20th Century Studios’ ALIEN: ROMULUS. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved

Part of Alien’s mystique has always been its hints at a wider mythology – including the mysterious Space Jockey and its derelict ship – that were left unexplained… until Prometheus and Covenant provided answers no one really understood, let alone wanted. Perhaps pointedly, Alvarez claims “there’s not time to dwell on philosophy too much in this movie. The pace is so different. When you’re running for your life in this very raw, survival-horror way, there’s just no time to go there’, before acknowledging that there will be organic ‘connections’ to every Alien movie, and even nods to extended universe stories including comics, books, and games.“It is there for the audience that is looking for it.”

It all points to an Alien movie that is simultaneously familiar, while having something strikingly different to offer. “It’s a completely new take on it – like a really, completely new take on it – to the point that it’s actually a little bit scary,” says Jonsson. “As much as it is an homage to the original,” adds Merced, “I feel that Fede, as a fan, knew he wanted to see new things, and wanted to be the one to introduce them to the Alien world.”

But as Spaeny points out, first and foremost Romulus is a love letter to the series’ two defining instalments. “It was so much fun to, timeline-wise, place our story between one and two,” the star says with a grin. “As a fan, you’re able to connect the dots. So hopefully people can watch Alien, and then Alien: Romulus, and then Aliens. And that will be a satisfying thing.” The question of ‘what do you prefer?’ could soon get a lot more complicated.

Alien: Romulus opens in cinemas on August 16, 2024. While you wait, why not go and watch one of thebest Alien movies.

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GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension"2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package"3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure"4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years"5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths"1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show"2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie"3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action"4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien"5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite"1Squid Game season 2 review: “Secures its place as one of the best shows on television right now"2Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat"3Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses"4Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist"5Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”

GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension"2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package"3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure"4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years"5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths"1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show"2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie"3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action"4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien"5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite"1Squid Game season 2 review: “Secures its place as one of the best shows on television right now"2Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat"3Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses"4Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist"5Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”

GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension"2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package"3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure"4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years"5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths"1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show"2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie"3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action"4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien"5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite"1Squid Game season 2 review: “Secures its place as one of the best shows on television right now"2Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat"3Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses"4Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist"5Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”

GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension"2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package"3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure"4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years"5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths"1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show"2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie"3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action"4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien"5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite"1Squid Game season 2 review: “Secures its place as one of the best shows on television right now"2Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat"3Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses"4Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist"5Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”

GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS

1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension”

Nemesis board game models and tokens laid out on a board

1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension”

1

Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension”

2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package”

2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package”

2

Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package”

3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure”

3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure”

3

Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure”

4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years”

4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years”

4

Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years”

5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths”

5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths”

5

Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths”

1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show”

Shadow brandishes a gun in Sonic The Hedgehog 3

1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show”

1

Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show”

2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie”

2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie”

2

Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie”

3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action”

3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action”

3

Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action”

4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien”

4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien”

4

The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien”

5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite”

5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite”

5

Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite”

1Squid Game season 2 review: “Secures its place as one of the best shows on television right now”

Squid Game season 2

1Squid Game season 2 review: “Secures its place as one of the best shows on television right now”

1

Squid Game season 2 review: “Secures its place as one of the best shows on television right now”

2Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat”

2Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat”

2

Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat”

3Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses”

3Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses”

3

Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses”

4Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist”

4Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist”

4

Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist”

5Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”

5Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”

5

Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”

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