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Certification12 Our Rating

A super slacker and a consummate arse-licker come to blows when their shapely new colleague lets slip that she has a thing for the ‘employee of the month'. Employee of the month is everything that you'd expect from a lowbrow slapstick comedy, but unlike the vast majority of its peers this is a genuinely pretty funny stab at an overpopulated genre. find out more...
GIGANTIC (2009)

Certification15 Our Rating

A mattress salesman, who wants to adopt a Chinese baby and is being stalked by a wacko, meets a wealthy customer's daughter.
Well to do Manhattan rich kids get it on in this oh so quirky whimsical 'indie' romance. find out more...
GOON (2011)

Certification15 Our Rating

Lucy Fife Donaldson says: "Written by Apatow-adjacent Jay Baruchel (asseen in Knocked Up) and Evan Goldberg (PineappleExpress, Superbad),this is an affectionate and violent insight into the life of an Ice Hockeyenforcer, the player used to protect his team and intimidate the other players.Sean William Scott is Doug, a nice but none-too-bright bouncer, the black sheepof a family of Jewish doctors, who finds his calling as an enforcer who iseventually hired to protect a star player who has been find out more...


CertificationPG Our Rating


Certification15 Our Rating

Weeelll... same old really, isn't it? A plethora of good looking, vaguely 'highbrow' British stars; lovely shots of a picturesque London (Peckham, anyone?); and the affable Richard Curtis at the helm. Hugh Grant IS in it, but don't let that put you off, as he only appears for about 20 minutes. In fact, every character appears only briefly. This film differs from Notting Hill/Four Weddings fare because it weaves many different mini-stories (each about love in its many forms), which means that find out more...

Certification15 Our Rating

Finally! A popular 'indie' movie written and directed by a woman! This film shines with wit and warmth and brains, interesting people, beautiful dialogue and dark, dark humour. find out more...

CertificationPG Our Rating

Same Old Song revolves around two Parisian sisters caught in a web of dysfunctional relationships and romantic confusion. Odile, an upper-class wife and businesswoman, finds an escape from her submissive husband Claude when her old flame Nicholas unexpectedly returns. Camille, a naive tour guide falls for the slimy, young realtor Marc, while overlooking Simon, a caring older man with a passion for history. In a tribute to the classic films of Dennis Potter, Resnais has his characters lip-synch t find out more...

Certification18 Our Rating

Paul, Jimmy and Mark are three men with three things in common; their lives have gone belly up, their fond of a booze up, and the former may well be a result of the latter. Stuck on an alcohol management course after drink driving convictions the lads meet Richard, a fellow lush but crucially also a millionaire. It's at this point that Paul, Jimmy and Mark feel the need to relieve Richard of his wealth, a decision that precipitates some farce of the darkest order. One For The Road is a peculiarl find out more...

Certification15 Our Rating

Foreign affairs farce, with Cagney as an ambitious Coca-cola salesman who finds himself way out of his depth in his quest for promotion. Despatched to Germany to extract his boss's daughter from her marriage to a Commie, he just can't resist attempting to flog his sticky beverage to the Russians! find out more...

CertificationPG Our Rating

Jim Wormold, a vacuum cleaner salesman, is short of money, his 17-year-old daughter has reached an expensive age and so he accepts Hawthorne's offer of $300-plus a month and becomes Agent 59200/5, MI6's man in Havana. To keep the job, Wormold pretends to recruit sub-agents and sends fake stories, but these stories start to becoming disturbingly true. Based on the novel by Graham Greene, this was the final collaboration between him and director Carol Reed, whom had previously worked together on T find out more...