Linda Marric
Linda Marric is a freelance film critic and interviewer. She has written extensively about film and TV over the last decade. After graduating with a degree in Film Studies from King's College London, she has worked in post-production on a number of film projects and other film-related roles. She has a huge passion for intelligent sci-fi movies and is never put off by the prospect of a romantic comedy. Her favourite movie is Brazil.
Heart of Stone review: Gal Gadot’s action star glory
The Israeli star shines in this special spy action thriller
Gran Turismo review: A moving motoring story
Motorsports fans will of course enjoy the movie
Paris Memories review - Flashbacks to a terror attack
Alice Winocour’s latest film on the 2015 outrages focuses on the protagonist's feelings of guilt, alienation and, finally, acceptance
The Beanie Bubble review - Delusions of grandeur
Latest in brand biopic genre asks: Why did the world suddenly treat stuffed animals like gold dust?
You Hurt My Feelings review - Relationships tested by unvarnished truths
Jewish filmmaker Nicole Holofcener wrestles with questions of honesty in this well-observed comedy
Oppenheimer review: An explosive hit by Nolan at his best
Cillian Murphy will surely be courting Oscars after his performance
Barbie review: Absurd and deadly serious
Gerwig and Baumbach have given us the universal hit of the summer
Bird Box: Barcelona review - All the usual post-apocalyptic fodder
This thriller focuses on a society overrun by scary creatures
Insidious: The Red Door review - Neither scary nor entertaining
Fifth outing in Leigh Whannell and James Wan’s franchise quickly descends into cliched horror tropes
Elemental review: A charming but simplistic family tale
There is also an unmistakable Jewishness about this very personal immigrant tale
Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning review: Thrilling action set pieces with daredevil stunts
There's no wonder that they call Tom Cruise the last great movie star
Indiana Jones And The Dial of Destiny review: Saga ends with a whimper
Great performances from Harrison Ford and Phoebe Waller-Bridge can't rescue a film that runs out of steam
La Syndicaliste review: Playing the union blues
Electrifying central performance from Isabelle Huppert keeps sparks flying in gripping mystery thriller
New Superman is nice Jewish boy David Corenswet
And his Lois Lane is Mrs Maisel star Rachel Brosnahan
Nimona review: Quirky cartoon fun
Spies In Disguise duo Nick Bruno and Troy Quane return with beautiful LGBT story
Asteroid City review: Space cadets in quarantine
Wes Anderson has assembled an all-star cast for this tender yet devastating story set at a stargazers' convention
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