Linda Marric, HeyUGuys Movie News

Linda Marric

HeyUGuys Movie News

Contact Linda

Discover and connect with journalists and influencers around the world, save time on email research, monitor the news, and more.

Start free trial

Recent:
  • Unknown
Past:
  • HeyUGuys Movie News
  • The London Economic

Past articles by Linda:

Artemis Fowl review

Sometimes no matter how hard you try, it comes a time to admit to yourself that you really might not be the intended demographic for a movie. → Read More

White Lines Review

From Alex Pina, the creator of one of Netflix’s most binge-worthy original series Money Heist (La Casa De Papel), comes a brand new show set on the hedonistic isle of Ibiza. Starring Laura Haddock, Daniel Mays, Angela Griffin and Laurence Fox, White Lines is a darkly comedic crime drama about a troubled young woman who travels to … → Read More

Westworld's Simon Quarterman Talks to Us About His Return to the Show

Fans of the HBO and Sky Atlantic hit sci-fi show Westworld will be familiar with British actor Simon Quarterman's brilliant depiction of loveable rogue Lee Sizemore. → Read More

Mark Kermode's Secrets of Cinema: Superheroes

What a turbulent time this has been for the global film industry. With the majority of cinema chains closing their doors indefinitely, and most releases → Read More

GFF20 Sees Record Audience Numbers & Arracht Wins The Audience Award.

Glasgow Film Festival celebrated its highest ever attendance, with more than 43,000 admissions. In addition to the 43,147 attending screenings → Read More

Glasgow Film Festival Highlights

This year's festivities kicked off with with a bang with the opening night gala which presented Alice Winocour's beautifully atmospheric drama Proxima. → Read More

Glasgow Film Festival Highlights

This year's festivities kicked off with with a bang with the opening night gala which presented Alice Winocour's beautifully atmospheric drama Proxima. Winocour was also present after the main event for a Q&A session in which she talked about her experiences of working with a multi-national team of actors and technicians. Day 2 was marked by the Scottish premier screening of Lorcan Finnegan's… → Read More

The County Review

In The County, Rams writer/ director Grímur Hákonarson gives us another slice of rural Icelandic life in this stunning, heartbreaking and at times deliciously playful drama. Written by Hákonarson and with a stunning cinematography courtesy of Mart Taniel, the film tells the story of a woman’s solitary fight against corruption and injustice in her farming community. Middle aged couple Inga… → Read More

All Eyes on Iceland at GFF20

Fans of Icelandic cinema will be pleased to know that this year’s Glasgow Film Festival has a whole strand dedicated to the country and its cinema. This is GFF's biggest ever country focus strand, offering up a chance to catch the very best Icelandic films of the past years. This programme includes the UK premiere of the eagerly awaited The County, from Rams director Grímur Hákonarson. The… → Read More

Strong Female Representation At This Year's GFF

This year’s diverse programme includes some of the best new films made by women and featuring female central characters. As part of the 8th March → Read More

BAFTA Sessions 2020

Yesterday HeyUGuys joined BAFTA once again for an all-day event dedicated to this year’s Film Nominees. The Sessions which focused on different categories → Read More

BAFTA Shorts 2020 Review Roundup: Azaar, Godfish, The Trap & Learning to Skateboard in a Warzone

It's that time of the year again, and this year's new crop of hopefuls in BAFTA shorts category didn't disappointed. Offering a mixture → Read More

BAFTA Shorts 2020 Review Roundup: Azaar, Godfish, The Trap & Learning to Skateboard in a Warzone

It's that time of the year again, and this year's new crop of hopefuls in BAFTA shorts category didn't disappointed. Offering a mixture → Read More

The Irishman – LFF 2019 Review

The Irishman is cinema at its purest and most real form. Another tour de force from a director who knows his craft inside out. → Read More

The Goldfinch Review

In The Goldfinch, Brooklyn (2015) director John Crowley presents an ambitious yet decidedly muddled adaptation of Donna Tartt’s 2013 novel of the same name. Starring Ansel Elgor (Baby Driver, The Fault in Our Stars), Nicole Kidman as well as Stranger Things and IT star Finn Wolfhard, the film could well be one of the biggest misfires of the year, proving once again that book-to-screen… → Read More

Clemency Review – LFF 2019

Alfre Woodard gives a career defining turn in Clemency, Chinonye Chukwu’s beautifully understated drama about a death row warden who begins to question her profession after witnessing a botched execution. → Read More

Alice – EIFF 2019 Review

In Josephine Mackerras’s French language drama Alice, Emilie Piponnier stars as an ordinary middle-class young mother and housewife who discovers that her husband has been living a double life. The film, which won the SXSW Grand Jury Prize earlier this year, has been a real passion project for Mackerras who also wrote and oversaw every aspect of the production. With next to no money and unable… → Read More

Men In Black International: Entertaining yet wipeable

★★★☆☆ The fourth instalment in the iconic Men In Black franchise sees Liam Neeson and Chris Hemsworth joined by Hemsworth’s Thor: Ragnarok and Avengers co star Tessa Thompson in a sequel which isn’t half as bad as many would → Read More

Eating Animals: A sobering account of the modern farming industry

If you’ve ever wondered what goes on behind the closed gates of big corporate farming companies, you might find the truth even more shocking than you could have imagined. In a new documentary feature titled → Read More

Little: As in not much

★★☆☆☆ In Little, director Tina Gordon presents a deeply contrived, narratively flawed and criminally mirthless high concept comedy about a female tech boss who is transformed into her younger self when the pressures of → Read More