UK Box Office: March 25 – 27, 2011

1. Limitless – £2,087,363

2. A Turtle’s Tale: Sammy’s Adventure – £1,122,067

3. The Eagle – £1,038,954

4. Rango – £670,992

5. Unknown – £477,531

6. Battle: Los Angeles – £425,952

7. Anuvahood – £392,212

8. Chalet Girl – £339,947

9. The Lincoln Lawyer – £324,146

10. Hall Pass – £304,571

Poster: The Tree Of Life

Director – Terrence Malick

Starring – Brad Pitt, Sean Penn, Jessica Chastain and Kari Matchett

Trailer: Midnight In Paris

Director – Woody Allen

Starring – Owen Wilson, Rachel McAdams, Marion Cotillard and Kathy Bates

Poster: Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 2

Director – David Yates

Starring – Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint and Helena Bonham Carter

DVD Releases: March 28, 2011

Made In Dagenham

Director: Nigel Cole

Starring: Sally Hawkins, Bob Hoskins and Geraldine James

Life As We Know It

Director: Greg Berlanti

Starring: Katherine Heigl, Josh Duhamel and Christina Hendricks

Tamara Drewe

Director: Stephen Frears

Starring: Gemma Arterton, Luke Evans and Dominic Cooper

Unstoppable

Director: Tony Scott

Starring: Denzel Washington, Chris Pine and Rosario Dawson

Machete

Director: Ethan Maniquis, Robert Rodriguez

Starring: Danny Trejo, Jessica Alba and Robert De Niro

Secretariat

Director: Randall Wallace

Starring: Diane Lane, John Malkovich and Margo Martindale

You Again

Director: Andy Fickman

Starring: Kristen Bell, Odette Annable and Sigourney Weaver

Stone

Director: John Curran

Starring: Edward Norton, Milla Jovovich and Robert De Niro

The Warrior’s Way

Director: Sngmoo Lee

Starring: Dong-gun Jang, Kate Bosworth and Geoffrey Rush

Babies

Director: Thomas Balmès

Starring: Bayar, Hattie and Mari

Wake Wood

Director: David Keating

Starring: Ruth McCabe, Dan Gordon and Eva Birthistle

City Island

Director: Raymond De Felitta

Starring: Andy Garcia, Julianna Margulies and Steven Strait

Love Ranch

Director: Taylor Hackford

Starring: Helen Mirren, Joe Pesci and Bryan Cranston

Dream Home

Director: Ho-Cheung Pang

Starring: Josie Ho, Michelle Ye and Eason Chan

Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives

Director: Apichatpong Weerasethakul

Starring: Thanapat Saisaymar, Sakda Kaewbuadee and Matthieu Ly

US Box Office: March 25 – 27, 2011

1. Diary Of A Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules – $24,400,000

2. Sucker Punch – $19,015,000

3. Limitless – $15,225,000

4. The Lincoln Lawyer – $11,000,000

5. Rango – $9,800,000

6. Battle: Los Angeles – $7,600,000

7. Paul – $7,506,000

8. Red Riding Hood – $4,340,000

9. The Adjustment Bureau – $4,245,000

10. Mars Needs Moms – $2,186,000

Review: Faster (2010)

Faster is a new action-thriller from director George Tillman, Jr.

The film centers on an ex-con, Driver (Dwayne Johnson), who sets out to avenge his brother’s death after they were double-crossed during a heist years ago. During his campaign, however, he’s tracked by a veteran cop (Billy Bob Thornton) and an egocentric hit man (Oliver Jackson-Cohen).

While the premise has several notable elements of intrigue, the treatment, by writing duo Tony and Joe Gayton, is every bit as bleak and lackluster as expected; weighed down by exposition, formulaic direction and clichéd plot points.

It’s not at all helped by the screenwriters’ tendency to shift emphasis onto pointless, misleading subplots, like Killer’s backstory: a character that simply lacks the urgency needed to occupy such a large part that bears little importance to the main plot’s overall direction.

Tillman Jr’s unwillingness to take advantage of the narrative’s innately fun, B-movie potential guarantees that Faster – aside from the odd car chase and shoot-out – is every bit as intolerable as audiences have come to expect with such a conventional genre, the complete opposite of what Drive Angry, a film similar in ideas, achieved.

Johnson is – somewhat surprisingly – Faster’s greatest assest, in a role that proves he possesses the charm and presence needed to excel in the action genre. Here he’s the tough guy he needs to be, delivering a truly menacing performance: reticent, destructive and unrelenting.

It’s easily one of Johnson’s most compelling performances – certainly enough to redeem him of his recent fare of deplorable “family-comedy” roles.

Thornton looks annoyed and every bit reluctant to be in such frivolous fluff, but in a decidedly head-scratching way this informs his on screen persona, Cop, in an interesting, alluring and slick fashion.

Aside from Thornton, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje and Carla Gugino – as one of the men on Driver’s hit list and a detective after his head respectively – are the only two supporting cast members who distinguish themselves and carve out plausible characters you can empathise with – and that’s miraculous considering their shamefully limited screen time and laughable dialogue.

The rest of the supporting troupe – including the barely seen Jennifer Carpenter, Maggie Grace and Jackson-Cohen – are trivial and wholly disposable.

Faster is a passable yet mediocre and highly forgettable action-thriller, salvaged only by Johnson’s surprisingly rousing performance.

Poster: 13 Assassins

Director – Takashi Miike

Starring – Kôji Yakusho, Takayuki Yamada, Yûsuke Iseya and Gorô Inagaki

Poster: Meek’s Cutoff

Director – Kelly Reichardt

Starring – Michelle Williams, Brian Greenwood, Shirley Henderson and Paul Dano

Trailer: Meek’s Cutoff

Director – Kelly Reichardt

Starring – Michelle Williams, Brian Greenwood, Shirley Henderson and Paul Dano