that s it for the papers this hour. goodbye for now. hello and a very warm welcome to this week s film review here on bbc news. taking us through this week s cinema releases we have, as ever, mark kermode. mark, what delights have you been sampling this week? a very mixed bag this week. we have good luck to you, leo grande, starring emma thompson. we have the new francois ozon film, everything went fine. and lightyear, the ultimate origin story, apparently. good luck to you, leo grande, this had a lot of advance publicity because emma thompson has been talking about body image in the media a lot. yes. there has been a lot of press about it. she stars as a widowed former religious studies teacher who s only intimate encounter in her whole life has been her husband and apparently very mundane and vanilla. she s now single, widowed. and she s decided she wants to find out what all the fuss is about. she makes a list of stuff that she wants to do and being practical to the point
first up today were the women following on from their victory at lea valley in london yesterday, ellie rayer put them ahead in the first quarter. that had been against the run of play and two goals in three minutes saw england lose 2 1 this afternoon. they re fifth in the pro league table. netherlands are second. after that, there was also disappointment for england s men. they lost 3 0 to the netherlands yesterday, and were thumped 6 3 today. england remain fifth, netherlands go top. before we go, let s get the latest from the cardiff city stadium as wales look to end their 64 year wait to appear at a world cup. just a matter of minutes left there in cardiff, and it is still 1 0 to wales. as things stand, as the clock ticks down, it says wales wales there are, it is of course wales ukraine. as it stands, wales will be going to the world cup in qatar. a nervy finalfew going to the world cup in qatar. a nervy final few minutes there. you can follow all the latest from a
the guardian claims the pm s allies are preparing for a no confidence vote, and reports that borisjohnson will launch a policy fightback focusing on health and housing. that story continued in the financial times but the paper leads with reports of a 90% drop in the value of public listings in the us and europe since the war in ukraine started. so that s a little flavour of what you ll be waking up to tomorrow. let s start with the daily telegraph. tony, it s over to you, a lovely picture there of her majesty in green and waving, as well. a surprise appearance. figs in green and waving, as well. a surprise appearance. in green and waving, as well. a surprise appearance. as i m sure man of surprise appearance. as i m sure many of your surprise appearance. as i m sure many of your viewers surprise appearance. as i m sure many of your viewers know, - surprise appearance. as i m sure many of your viewers know, the | surprise appearance. as i m sure - many of your viewers
the film review. hello and welcome to the film review on bbc news. to take us through this week s cinema releases is mark kermode. what have you got for us this week, mark? a very exciting week. we have men, which is a horror inflected fairy tale. we have major, which is inspired by a true story of heroism. and bergman island can life and art ever be separated? men, the clip of this gives me the creeps so much that i don t think i could bring myself to watch it! and you say it s some kind of fantasy horror? yes. let me try and sell it to you. so it s by alex garland, who wrote and directed ex machina and annihilation. i think it s like a playfully twisted fairy tale about gender. jessie buckley is harper. she s come out of an abusive relationship. she decides to go off to a country retreat to what she calls the dream country house with the emphasis on dream, because everything about what we re looking at tells us, you know, there s an apple tree outside from which apples