Latest articles from Jack Bool

Our 16-year-old film blogger Jack Bool reviews: Red Dawn

Remakes in general are mostly bad. For example you only have to look at last year's Total Recall to realise that, and whilst most of these remakes are terrible, occasionally we get the odd one which is good, but only very rarely.

Our 16-year-old film blogger Jack Bool reviews: Red Dawn

Remakes in general are mostly bad. For example you only have to look at last year's Total Recall to realise that, and whilst most of these remakes are terrible, occasionally we get the odd one which is good, but only very rarely.

Our 16-year-old film blogger Jack Bool reviews: Broken city

By now I think we've all heard the constant moans and groans coming from the US about how bad the month of January is for movies, and whilst they may complain about a month that was fantastic for us in the UK (Lincoln, Zero Dark Thirty etc.), we have now reached the time of year when the things they saw in January come to our shores, hence Broken City.

Our 16-year-old film blogger Jack Bool reviews: Broken city

By now I think we've all heard the constant moans and groans coming from the US about how bad the month of January is for movies, and whilst they may complain about a month that was fantastic for us in the UK (Lincoln, Zero Dark Thirty etc.), we have now reached the time of year when the things they saw in January come to our shores, hence Broken City.

Our 16-year-old film blogger Jack Bool reviews Hyde Park on Hudson

Hyde Park on Hudson stars Bill Murray as FDR and follows the story of the love affair that took place between the former president and his distant cousin Margaret Stuckley, centred around the weekend in 1939 when the King and Queen of the United Kingdom visited upstate New York.

Our 16-year-old film blogger Jack Bool reviews Hyde Park on Hudson

Hyde Park on Hudson stars Bill Murray as FDR and follows the story of the love affair that took place between the former president and his distant cousin Margaret Stuckley, centred around the weekend in 1939 when the King and Queen of the United Kingdom visited upstate New York.