Film Review

‘The Christophers’: Sir Ian Warms up For a Last Run at Gandalf

BY Mark Jackson TIMEJune 1, 2026 PRINT

R | 1h 40m | Comedy, Drama | 2026

As a Tolkien purist, I was going to boycott Andy Serkis’s upcoming “The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum.” Then, I found out the story comes from the holy LOTR Appendices, and Sir Ian McKellen will be returning as Gandalf. I changed my mind. I’ll most definitely be seeing that.

Old man in cap and checkered jacket sits in front of computer in The Christophers.
Julian Sklar (Ian McKellen) is an over-the-hill artist in “The Christophers.” (Claudette Barius/NEON)

For now, here’s Sir Ian McKellen in “The Christophers.”

‘The Christophers’

Prolific filmmaker and master storyteller Steven Soderbergh can work successfully within a wide range of styles and genres: from “Sex, Lies, and Videotape,” “Erin Brockovich,” “Magic Mike,” the “Ocean’s” series, to “Black Bag.” One can never be sure what sort of hat he’s going to wear next.

He follows up suave spy flick “Black Bag” with “The Christophers;” a skeptical, rather cynical, London-based comedy-drama about one Julian Sklar (McKellen), a former giant of the British art scene.

Epoch Times Photo
The “heirs abhorrent,” Sallie Milton Sklar (Jessica Gunning) and Barnaby Sklar (James Corden), in “The Christophers.” (Claudette Barius/NEON)

While the fictitious Sklar’s real-life contemporaries, such as Frank Auerbach, Francis Bacon, and Lucian Freud retained their creative relevance up until their deaths, Sklar’s popularity peaked in the 1990s, then fell off. Now, he’s got a secondary career as an acerbic, Simon Cowell-like celebrity-critic, on a 1990s television art show called “Art Fight,” that’s fading in the rearview mirror.

The still-spry 86-year-old McKellen has himself a blast playing the sly, 1960s bad-boy British artist who hasn’t picked up a brush in decades. Sklar continues to squeeze out a few ducats by donning a cheesy beret, and recording cameo-style personalized video notes for his dwindling fanbase. He signs off by pantomiming his signature.

The Heirs Abhorrent

Meanwhile, Julian’s bungling, grasping offspring, Barnaby (James Corden) and Sallie (Jessica Gunning) whom he hilariously refers to as the “heirs abhorrent,” are eager to get their greedy paws on some cold, hard inheritance. This would be in the form of a series of unfinished portraits entitled “The Christophers,” that are wasting away in his classically artist-hoarder Bloomsbury townhouse attic. They’d be worth millions but they represent a painful time in Sklar’s life, so he has no intention of ever finishing them.

But maybe, if he won’t finish them—someone else could? Like, illegally? Turns out, the amazingly untalented Sallie has a friend, Lori Butler (Michaela Coel) with whom she attended art school. Lori now does restoration and has a rare talent for mimicking other painters’ styles.

young woman looking at canvasses in The Christophers
Lori Butler (Michaela Coel) examining a series of paintings entitled “The Christophers,” in “The Christophers.” (Claudette Barius/NEON)

Barnaby and Sallie recruit Lori to ostensibly be their dad’s new assistant, when, in fact, the plan is for her get her hands on the remnants of ‘The Christophers’—and forge them to completion.

Lori also has some personal history with Sklar herself, which Sklar, wafting about in his vast cloud of self-involvement, has long since forgotten. Or has he? Much subtle subterfuge and plotting goes on.

old man points at painting while young woman looks on in The Christophers
Lori Butler (Michaela Coel) and Julian Sklar (Ian McKellen), in “The Christophers.” (Claudette Barius/NEON)

Performances

The screenplay is quite wordy and has McKellen often sounding more Shakespearian-thespian-ish rather than Hollywood-movie-actor-ish. But, being as he is, a Brit-thespian-royalty-emeritus, he lip-smacks all the dialogue and conjures up a delightful egocentric foppish, old art coot. He relishes such observations as—while sashaying around in a dressing gown under which he’s bare-naked—”Weinstein ruined the bathrobe for the rest of us!”

Old man and young woman talk in The Christophers
Lori Butler (Michaela Coel) and Julian Sklar (Ian McKellen), in “The Christophers.” (Claudette Barius/NEON)

Coel’s Sphinx-like Lori is, however, a worthy opponent. While the elder Sklar blusters, guilt-trips, and threatens, she’s coolly inscrutable and watchful. It’s a delicious, complicated battle of wills as each repeatedly gains the upper hand only to lose it again.

“The Christophers” is an artfully contrived, high-brow art drama that often entertains but never really presents life lessons one can apply to one’s own existence, other than, perhaps—don’t be an heir abhorrent. it’ll be an ideal choice for film clubs to pick apart, because, like fine paintings, the film reveals many layers.

Promotional poster for "The Christophers." (NEON)
Promotional poster for “The Christophers.” (NEON)

‘The Christophers’
Director: Steven Soderbergh
Starring: Ian McKellen, Michaela Coel, James Corden, Jessica Gunning
MPAA Rating: R
Running Time: 1 hour, 40 minutes
Release Date: April 10, 2026
Rating: 3 1/2 stars out of 5

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Mark Jackson
Film Critic
Mark Jackson is the senior film critic for The Epoch Times and a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic. Mark earned a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Williams College, followed by classical theater conservatory training, and has 20 years' experience as a New York professional actor. He narrated The Epoch Times audiobook "How the Specter of Communism Is Ruling Our World," available on iTunes, Audible, and YouTube. Mark is featured in the book "How to Be a Film Critic in Five Easy Lessons" by Christopher K. Brooks. In addition to films, he enjoys Harley-Davidsons, rock-climbing, qigong, martial arts, and human rights activism.
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