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Alex B Cann film column - Thursday 6th November 2025

1985 was a vintage year for movies, with Beverley Hills Cop, A View To A Kill, and of course Back To The Future, which I watched on the IMAX screen in Ashton this week with a friend who has somehow never seen this classic before! I was rather envious of him, watching the time travel escapade for the first time. The special effects have aged jawdroppingly well, and my favourite fact is that Christopher Lloyd was just 46 when he played the eccentric Doc Brown.

I don't think we need to worry too much about spoilers when reviewing this one, so I must say that the storyline around Marty McFly's mother lusting after him back in 1955 is a bit weird. It's far more prominent in the plot than I remember, watching it as a kid! The parallels between Biff and Donald Trump are pretty apparent too. This is a stone cold classic from Steven Spielberg, and the time travelling DeLorean is still super cool. One thing's for sure...no time travel would ever be possible on Mottram Moor. A cracking watch, and fully deserving of its 95% Rotten Tomatoes rating. If you want to visit the clock tower featured in the film, you can hop on a train from Stalybridge to Huddersfield, and marvel at how similar the station frontage looks! The "roads? Where we're going, we don't need roads" final line from the Doc is still a belter too, setting things up nicely for the sequel set in 2015.

Regretting You has been savaged by many critics, but I have to say I thought it was a decent romantic drama. Based on the Coleen Hoover book about first love, family, grief and betrayal, my only criticism is in line with a lot of films nowadays, it was probably about 20 minutes longer than it needed to be. I am a big fan of Mason Thames, who was excellent in Black Phone and the live action remake of How To Train Your Dragon, and thought that Allison Williams and McKenna Grace were convincing as a mother and daughter navigating their worlds being turned upside down following a car crash that claims the lives of two key characters. Yes, some of it does require a little suspension of disbelief, but I found it eminently watchable and well acted. I don't understand the opprobrium it's attracted from some quarters.

And on Halloween, I watched Snoop Dogg tackling vampires in Day Shift, alongside Jamie Foxx, whose estranged wife thinks he spends his time cleaning swimming pools rather than hunting vampires and making cash by extracting their gnashers. All totally daft, but fangtastic fun in places, with a few references along the way to Lost Boys, including the final line from Snoop as he emerges from a sewer and lights a cigar as the film reaches its conclusion. Won't win any awards, but I've seen far worse this year!

Next week, my verdict on Shelby OaksDie My Love and The Choral, filmed in lovely Saltaire.

More from Alex Cann's Weekly Film Blog

  • Alex B Cann film column - Thursday 20th November 2025

    The Running Man sees Glen Powell take on the role of Ben Richards, who has to survive 30 days on the run from professional killers to win a huge cash prize. Based on the Stephen King 1982 novel, you may remember Arnie starred in a 1987 film that has become something of a cult classic since. I'm not entirely sure I've watched the original, as I was probably too young, but I thought Edgar Wright did a pretty competent job with this remake. Cinema audiences don't seem to share my sentiments, sadly, as it's flopped at the box office, and cost six times the amount The Long Walk did (which is arguab

  • Alex B Cann Film Column - Thursday 13th November 2025

    Depending on whether you're in the mood for cosy or quirky, I've got something for you. It was nice to see our local indie busy on Sunday for The Choral, which stars Ralph Fiennes as Dr. Henry Guthrie, who is recruited following his return from Germany to lead the Choral Society in Ramsden. The choir is struggling to attract any male recruits, due to the fact the war is on (the story is set in 1916), and it's also a battle to find a non-German composer's work to base their next performance around.

  • Alex Cann's weekly film blog - 9th January

    A mix this week of stuff that I watched over the festive season and a couple from this week, to start another year of movie watching!

  • Alex's Weekly Film Blog - 31st October

    With it being Halloween week, it's worth mentioning that horror has had a rather lucrative year at the cinema, with movies such as The Substance, Terrifier 3 and Smile 2 all delighting audiences and smashing their budgets at the box office.

  • Alex's Weekly Film Blog - 17th October

    There's often a debate about whether Die Hard is a Christmas movie. In my book, it absolutely is. It contains four Christmas songs in the soundtrack, the action takes place at a Christmas Eve office party, and both the director and scriptwriter say it is a festive movie.

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