WE’VE got a terrific trio of triumphant films coming your way from October 21 to 27. With trolls, trains and talented teens, we’ve got more T's than St Andrews on a sunny day or The Queen’s Garden Party in the height of summer.

The biggest question since “Who’s the daddy?” in Bridget Jones’s Baby, we will now discover the answer to the mysterious and sinister query: What did Rachel really see from the train? The hype of Paula Hawkins’ novel The Girl on the Train was all the rage in the beginning of 2015 and has now been transformed into a nail biting thriller.

Rachel Watson leads an ordinary life with her own problems stemming from her recent divorce, but carries on with her day-to-day living, going to work on the train. Innocently people watching, she spots a seemingly idyllic couple, Megan and Scott but a fleeting snapshot from the train tells far from the truth. Abuse, alcoholism and adultery play a vicious part in this mystery and when Megan goes missing, Rachel realises that things are more disturbing than they first appeared.

This half term, we’ve got the happiest, all singing, insanely colourful animation of recent years. Imagine being in a ball pit full of kittens, cupcakes and love, we imagine Trolls is somewhere in the middle of all that goodness, with a wonderful pop soundtrack echoing in the background. In Troll Town, everything is swell, until the mean Bergens come to steal all the tiny troll residents. It is up to the shiningly optimistic leader Poppy and new, reluctant companion Branch to save the trolls from their dreadful fate.

Finally, we’re showing Tim Burton’s latest adaptation of Ransom Riggs’ quirky novel Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. Following a trail of clues left by his dying grandfather, Jacob embarks on an adventure to Wales to find a special orphanage. What he finds is a home full of extraordinary children with wonderful powers under the protection of Miss Peregrine. But, they are all in danger, and it is up to Jacob and his new found powers to help his new friends.

Evie Myers