- Labour suspends MP over 'assault'
- Healthcare regulator chief quits
- Mild weather hits Centrica profits
- Body found at murder arrest house
- Scrap NHS Bill, says Royal College
- Weight loss operations up by 12%
- Church settles phone hacking claim
- Pay freeze for 1.6m council staff
- Son's tribute to funnyman Carson
- Toddler critically ill after crash
- Net immigration steady at 250,000
- GPs 'overpaid for ghost patients'
- Adoption process to be speeded up
- MEP arrested over 'fraud' claims
- Probe into sex-selection abortions
- Tube staff under attack, says RMT
- 'Sharp drop' in degree courses
- Action urged on hip fracture costs
- Clegg reveals £1bn jobs fund boost
- Tributes to 'jolly jester' Carson
Cinema
FILM REVIEW: Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance 3D (12A)
In his epic poem Divine Comedy, Dante describes Hell as nine concentric circles of increasing suffering, in which unrepentant sinners are condemned to punishments that fit their crimes.
FILM: Corman’s World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (Cert TBC)
For almost 60 years, Michigan-born filmmaker Roger Corman has been a beacon of low-budget creativity and invention in the industry, directing and producing hundreds of films that have launched the careers of some of Hollywood’s great talents behind and in front of the camera.
FILM: Position among the Stars (Cert TBC)
Following his celebrated 2001 film The Eye Of The Day and Shape Of The Moon in 2004, Dutch filmmaker Leonard Retel Helmrich completes his trilogy documenting the trials and tribulations of the Shamshuddin family in the slums of Jakarta.
FILM REVIEW: Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (12A)
Published in 2005, Jonathan Safran Foer’s second novel Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close revisited the deadliest act of terrorism committed on American soil through the eyes of a nine-year-old boy.
FILM REVIEW: The Woman in the Fifth (15)
Bafta award winner Pawel Pawlikowski directs this adaptation of the bestselling novel by Douglas Kennedy.
FILM REVIEW: Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance 3D (12A)
Nicolas Cage reprises his role as a motorcycle rider condemned to do the Devil’s bidding in this action-driven sequel directed by Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor. Johnny Blaze (Cage) is wrestling with the curse of Ghost Rider and he goes into exile, hoping to keep his fiery alter ego under wraps.
FILM REVIEW: The Vow (12A)
For some brides, a fairy-tale waltz up the aisle turns out to be a day they would rather forget.
FILM REVIEW: Big Miracle (PG)
In 1988, countries came together in a rare demonstration of solidarity to free three grey whales stranded in the pack ice near Barrow Point in Alaska.
FILM REVIEW: The Woman in Black (12A)
Less is certainly more in The Woman In Black, a chilling film version of the celebrated novel by Susan Hill, which has been re-imagined as a television movie, a radio series and a hit stage play in the 30 years since its publication.
FILM REVIEW: The Muppets (U)
For more than 35 years, Kermit The Frog, Miss Piggy and their fun-loving friends have been firmly engrained in our rose-tinted childhood memories with their slapstick routines and song and dance numbers.
FILM REVIEW: Young Adult (15)
Gentlemen don’t prefer blondes in Young Adult, a scabrous black comedy about a faded beauty queen who clings on to the past to avoid acknowledging the loneliness and despair that hang over her like cheap perfume.
FILM REVIEW: Man on a Ledge (12A)
With the millions of dollars lavished on high-octane Hollywood thrillers and the dozens of people toiling behind the scenes, surely someone should spot glaring continuity errors.
FILM REVIEW: Jack and Jill (PG)
In the popular 18th century nursery rhyme, Jack and Jill went up a hill and took a tumble as they fetched a pail of water.
FILM REVIEW: Journey 2: The Mysterious Island 3G (PG)
When the going gets tough, the tough get soppy in Journey 2: The Mysterious Island, an old-fashioned, gung-ho adventure based loosely on Jules Verne.
Making sure you’re ready for the digital swtichover in Chichester Bognor Regis and Midhurst
“A lot of people still don’t have a clue about it,” reveals Mark Somerville of Midhurst TV firm CJ Hampshire on the hugely-significant digital switchover.
FILM REVIEW: Chronicle (12A)
As weakling Peter Parker discovered to his cost before his transformation into web-spinning superhero Spider-Man, with great power comes great responsibility.
FILM REVIEW: Carnage (15)
Director Roman Polanski strips away the veneer of civility that supposedly separates man from beasts and reduces two well-to-do couples to snarling adversaries in this film version of the award-winning stage comedy God Of Carnage.
FILM REVIEW: Like Crazy (12A)
crLove in its many wondrous forms is an essential component of the human experience.
FILM REVIEW: A Monster in Paris (U)
A giant flea nurtures a passion for music in Bibo Bergeron’s computer-animated fable that teaches us to never judge a wingless, blood-sucking parasite by its spiny legs or hairy abdomen.
DVD REVIEW: Don’t Be Afraid Of The Dark, (15), (95 mins), new on DVD.
A young girl makes the strangest of new friends in this supernatural chiller from director Troy Nixey.
FILM REVIEW: The GREY (15)
Air transport may well be trumpeted as the safest form of travel but for film-makers, the possibilities of disaster above terra firma are irresistible.
FILM REVIEW: The Descendants (15)
Good things come to those who wait and it’s been an agonising seven years since writer-director Alexander Payne ventured to the sun-dappled vineyards of the quirky Oscar-winning comedy Sideways.
FILM: The Sitter (15)
A badly behaved college student discovers that babysitting isn’t the breeze he thought it would be in this foul-mouthed comedy from director David Gordon Green (Pineapple Express, Your Highness).
Looking for...
Featured advertisers
Jobs
Search for a job
Motors
Search for a car
Property
Search for a house
Weather for Bognor
Thursday 23 February 2012
Today
Mist
Temperature: 8 C to 12 C
Wind Speed: 15 mph
Wind direction: West
Tomorrow
Cloudy
Temperature: 6 C to 12 C
Wind Speed: 14 mph
Wind direction: West

