New in cinemas this week are the British action thriller Fuze, the Australian World War II doco Under a Bamboo Sky and the French drama The Stranger.
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12.20pm on Apr 16, 2026
Under A Bamboo Sky ★½
By Jake Wilson
(M), 77 minutes
This erratic documentary begins with a disclaimer which warns, among other things, that some of what we’re about to hear “may be considered offensive”. What this means is that the soundtrack consists largely of taped recollections by Australian veterans who were POWs during World War II and routinely refer to their Japanese captors using racial slurs.
While the language is certainly of its time, the value of the film lies almost entirely in the unvarnished authenticity of these recordings, sourced from interviews originally done for the 2001 ABC series Australians At War and from other archives.
A group of soldiers in Under a Bamboo Sky: frank, and sometimes moving in unexpected ways.
Rather than singling out individuals, the director Serge Ou and his team aim for a choral effect, letting voices flow together so we seem to follow a single unknown soldier on a journey through hell – starting out in Singapore’s Changi Barracks, moving on to the construction of the notorious Thai-Burma railway, and winding up in Japan, where the destruction of Nagasaki is visible from afar.
4.44pm on Apr 15, 2026
Fuze ★★★½
By Sandra Hall
(M) 98 minutes
Fuze is a heist movie with extras. The heist, a bank robbery, takes place in a west London neighbourhood where an unexploded bomb has been discovered on a building site – a narrative tactic that gives us two crises at once, instantly doubling the film’s suspense ratio. And the cast includes not one, but two actors who have been touted as possible James Bonds.
Sam Worthington in Fuze: Grumpiness is one of his specialities.
Aaron Taylor-Johnson, one of the front-runners in the bid to find the next 007, plays the film’s bomb disposal expert, Major Will Tranter, while Theo James, also on the Bond list, assumes a South African accent as Karalis, the leading bank robber, an expert in diamonds and how to identify and fence them.
The film is directed by a Scot, David Mackenzie, who is not new to heist movies. In 2016, he made Hell or High Water, which was nominated for four Oscars, including best picture. Written by Yellowstone’s Taylor Sheridan, it’s a modern western that combines its bank robberies with an elegiac tribute to the end of the frontier era. It has a lot in common with the Coen brothers’ No Country for Old Men.
3.18pm on Apr 15, 2026
The Stranger ★★★
By Jake Wilson
(M) 123 minutes
François Ozon, once an enfant terrible of French cinema, nowadays looks like an establishment figure, never more so than in this plush-looking black-and-white adaptation of Albert Camus’ 1942 novel The Stranger (previously filmed by Luchino Visconti in 1967).
In turn, the book is among the most securely canonised works of 20th-century French literature, a classic of existentialism (although Camus rejected the label). Even in the English-speaking world it retains a wide readership, especially as it’s brief and straightforwardly written enough to be studied in schools.
Still, the question lingers: what is this film really about? Ozon may no longer be bent on scandalising his audience as he was in his youth, but he still has a teasing side, nor has his source material lost its ability to puzzle and provoke.
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Pinned post from 11.24am on Apr 15, 2026
What’s new in cinemas this week
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Hello and welcome to this week’s film review wrap – the big movies landing in cinemas this week.
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