Charlize Theron

Oscar night: A red-carpet review

Anne Kingston on the best and worst sartorial choices

Twisted fairy tales: ‘Snow White’ and ‘Moonrise Kingdom’

Twilight sap Kristen Stewart gets a Joan of Arc makeover as Snow White, Princess Warrior

The art of cruelty in ‘Young Adult’ and ‘Carnage’

Charlize Theron gives a dynamite performance in a movie that’s as self-destructive as its heroine

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Film Reviews: Handling the truth in ‘W,’ ‘Passchendaele,’ ‘Battle in Seattle’ and ‘Happy-Go-Lucky’

It never rains, it pours. This week the big screen is teeming with history and politics. From America, fairly recent events are mythologized in two docudramas: Oliver Stone spins an instant-replay of George W. Bush’s life and times in W., which could be subtitled Attack of the White House Clones. And Stuart Townsend dramatizes the anti-globalization movement’s 1999 baptism of fire in Battle in Seattle, which conjures a pre-9/11 era of uncomplicated protest. In Canada, meanwhile, Paul Gross launches Passchendaele, his strained but valiant attempt to honour Canadian heroism in the First World War. These three films are radically different in tone and substance, but they are message movies—movies on a mission. And they all attempt to fuse entertainment with politics with mixed results.