Cyrano, starring Peter Dinklage as the besotted poet, keeps up with the likes of Moulin Rouge! and Les Mis thanks to a generous helping of charm

Cyrano                                                                                           Cert: 12A, 2hrs 4mins

Rating:

The Duke                                                                                          Cert: 12, 1hr 36mins

Rating:

Studio 666                                                                                      Cert: 18, 1hr 46mins

Rating:

Ah, Cyrano, many of you will be thinking, we know that one. It’s about the poor chap who’s in love with a pretty girl called Roxanne but doesn’t stand a chance because of his absolutely humungous nose.

Wasn’t Steve Martin in it? Or was it Gérard Depardieu?

Right on both counts. Depardieu did a version of Edmond Rostand’s 19th Century play in 1990, while Martin muddied the waters by updating it to the American present day – or at least the 1980s – and calling it Roxanne.

This Cyrano features a powerful and poignant central performance from Game Of Thrones star Peter Dinklage, and a generous helping of charm from Haley Bennett (above) as Roxanne

This Cyrano features a powerful and poignant central performance from Game Of Thrones star Peter Dinklage, and a generous helping of charm from Haley Bennett (above) as Roxanne

Now along comes a new version from acclaimed British director Joe Wright, best known for Atonement, Pride And Prejudice and Darkest Hour. I enjoyed it very much, but it does require a health warning – two, in fact.

First is that no oversized proboscis features at all. Instead, the physical obstacle that lies in the way of the enduring love that soldier and poet Cyrano de Bergerac has for his crush, Roxanne, is his lack of height.

As this Cyrano indelicately puts it: ‘The world will never accept a midget and a tall, beautiful woman.’

Second health warning is that it’s, er… a musical. Yes, that came as a surprise to me too.

Rather than an oversized proboscis, the physical obstacle that lies in the way of the enduring love that soldier and poet Cyrano de Bergerac (Dinklage, above) is his lack of height

Rather than an oversized proboscis, the physical obstacle that lies in the way of the enduring love that soldier and poet Cyrano de Bergerac (Dinklage, above) is his lack of height

A familiar mix of French period setting and music inevitably calls to mind the likes of Moulin Rouge! and Les Misérables.

But this Cyrano stands comparison with both, helped by a powerful and poignant central performance from Game Of Thrones star Peter Dinklage, and a generous helping of charm from Haley Bennett as Roxanne.

The songs, which hail from a new 2018 musical version, are a bit of an acquired taste but they grew on me, and the Shakespearean triangle of confusion, which sees Roxanne falling in love with the handsome Christian, but only because his love letters are being secretly written by the eloquent Cyrano, shines through.

Despite a gloriously debauched performance from Ben Mendelsohn as the evil Duc de Guiche and Bafta-nominated good looks, Cyrano still won’t be for everyone but, nevertheless, comes highly recommended.

As does The Duke, which not only finally arrives in cinemas some 18 months after its premiere at the 2020 Venice Film Festival but is tinged with sadness following the sudden death of its director, Roger Michell – best known for Notting Hill.

The Duke, which arrives in cinemas some 18 months after its premiere, retells when Kempton Bunton (Jim Broadbent, above with Helen Mirren) stole a portrait of the Duke of Wellington

The Duke, which arrives in cinemas some 18 months after its premiere, retells when Kempton Bunton (Jim Broadbent, above with Helen Mirren) stole a portrait of the Duke of Wellington

But as epitaphs go, this is a gently lovely one, notable for its well polished screenplay, some very funny lines and the sight of Helen Mirren resplendent in shabby housecoat and baggy, Nora Batty-style stockings.

It retells a long-forgotten moment from modern British history when, in 1961, an irritating bolshie know-all from Newcastle called Kempton Bunton (Jim Broadbent) stole Goya’s portrait of the Duke of Wellington from the National Gallery.

Even then it was worth £140,000.

But Bunton didn’t steal it for financial gain, he stole it to make a point.

The money the Conservative government had just spent on saving the portrait for the nation could have been used for better things, he believed, such as his personal campaign for free TV licences for the elderly and wounded war veterans.

Broadbent and Mirren, who plays Bunton’s long-suffering wife, are both terrific, but there are lovely supporting performances across the board. The result is warm-hearted, funny and unexpectedly touching, too.

An opening moment that sees a young woman being bludgeoned to death by an unseen killer is the first of many, many misjudgments in Studio 666, a blood-spattered and hideously self-indulgent horror-spoof from the rock group Foo Fighters, and their charismatic leader, Dave Grohl.

It is only February but it has got to be a candidate for one of the worst films we’ll see all year. And just like one of Foo Fighters’ live sets, it’s interminable as well.

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