Most of what I have watched this month has been on Sky Movies:

House Party
In this remake of the 1990 comedy of the same name, Jacob Latimore and Tosin Cole star as a pair of house cleaners who discover they are assigned to clean the mansion of Lebron James while he’s overseas. Naturally, they decide to throw a giant party. The original was not exactly a classic, but this is worse. Latimore and Cole are both annoying and the laughs are minimal.
Rating: 3.5 out of 10

High Heat
When the local mafia shows up to burn down her restaurant as part of an insurance scam, Ana (Olga Kurylenko), a chef who just happens to have a special set of skills, tries to defend herself and her property. The enclosed setting, short running time and Kurylenko are all plus points, the added comedic characters and a damp squib ending do not work.
Rating: 5.5 out of 10

The Harbinger
Filmed during Covid and set in a world in the grips of a pandemic, Emily Davis stars as Mavis who has been beset by nightmares. When she is visited by her friend Monique (Gabby Beans), they end up having to confront their greatest fears. The anxiety at the time of the pandemic is well represented and there are a few chilling moments, but the dream within a dream, within a dream structure cannot completely sustain interest.
Rating: 5.5 out of 10

Assassin
In his final film, Bruce Willis plays the head of private military operation inventing futuristic tech that enables the mind of an agent to inhabit the body of another person to carry out covert missions. But when an agent (Mustafa Shakir) is killed during a secret mission, his wife (Nomzamo Mbatha) takes his place in an attempt to bring the man responsible to justice. This is jumbled and disjointed stuff. Willis is a sad sight and has little to do after the opening scene.
Rating: 3 out of 10

Margaux
A group of college friends rent a smart house for a weekend of partying. Later, they start to realize that Margaux, the house’s super advanced AI system, has sinister designs for them. Of the many films this resembles, it has neither the inventiveness of M3gan, the intelligence of Moon or 2001 or the humour of Bodies, Bodies, Bodies. All of the characters are horrible and you will probably be wishing them a gruesome death.
Rating: 4 out of 10

Biosphere
After a global apocalypse that has killed almost all humans, the only survivors are childhood friends Billy (Mark Duplass), the former president of the United States of America, and Ray (Sterling K. Brown), a scientist and Billy’s former adviser. Duplass is never less than good but he cannot save this downbeat and deadly dull drama.
Rating: 2 out of 10

Maggie Moore(s)
Small town police Chief Sanders (Jon Hamm) is investigating the murder of a woman called Maggie Moore, when, a week later, another woman with the same name is also killed. Writer Paul Bernbaum and director John Slattery manage to pull off a tricky balancing act, combining wry, dry, humour with a properly intricate procedural.

Hamm, fresh from his excellent portrayal of Fletch, is on great form again. Tina Fey, playing the neighbour of the first victim, has great chemistry with Hamm, and their burgeoning relationship is sweetly written. Nick Mohammed is fun as Sanders’ deputy and Oona Roche makes a telling contribution as the shop assistant who unwittingly triggers the second murder.
Rating: 8 out of 10

There was also one on Amazon Prime:

Detective Knight: Independence
This is Bruce Willis’ penultimate film and the third of a trilogy involving Detective James Knight. This time, he is hunting a deranged paramedic who is on a killing spree. His illness is clearly taking its toll, and, as a result we spend way too much time in the presence of the bad guy, played unconvincingly by Val Kilmer’s son, Jack.
Rating: 4 out of 10