Crocodile Dundee In LA Paul Hogan reprises his role as Mick Dundee, a rough-and-tumble Australian Outback hunter suddenly transplanted to Los Angeles. Linda Kozlowski is back as his live-in love. Erin Free Hollywood Reporter 'Everything about this film is tired and out of touch, from its telegraphed gags to its dog-eared fish-out-of-water premise. The film quite possibly reaches a low point of tastelessness with Dundee's chance meeting in a park with a meditating Mike Tyson. While Hogan has at least the grace of not taking himself too seriously, Kozlowski is as stiff and unyielding as her never-changing hairdo.' The Body Antonio Banderas plays a military intelligence officer-turned priest despatched from Rome to Israel where co-star Olivia Williams has uncovered a tomb, possibly containing the remains of Jesus Christ. Derek Jacobi plays a monk. Leah Rozen People 'The movie company responsible for this howler . . . at least had the decency to release it after Easter and Passover. Be thankful for small blessings. The dialogue is clunky, the plotting contrived, and the acting ranges from sullenly wooden (Banderas) to feyly eccentric (Jacobi and, especially, Jason Flemyng as a flittish priest).' Panic A stylish film noir where William H Macy plays Alex, a hit man sent out on assignments by his father (played by Donald Sutherland) - and who yearns to get out of the family business. Tracey Ullman is Alex's wife and Neve Campbell the young woman he is drawn to. Kenneth Turan LA Times 'A film noir, but a noir of the bright, modern, sunlit variety. But while the truly classic noirs had if not a naturalness at least a kind of un-self-consciousness about them, Panic is characterised by a deliberateness and an obvious calculation that is impressive on one level but a barrier the film has to overcome on another.' Compiled by Kavita Daswani