MOVE out of the way kiddos, your parents have been waiting a long time for the Incredibles 2 film. Fourteen long years.

In Brad Bird’s The Incredibles, superheroes were banned for vigilantism but that didn’t stop one man from suiting up.

What stood this Pixar animation out from the super-crowd - and still does in today’s overcrowded scene - was its focus on family. Mr Incredible’s wife, son and daughter were all incognito superheroes, too.

His power was super strength, Mrs Incredible was super bendy, whilst the kids had super speed and invisibility in their armoury. Only when working as a team could the Incredibles save the day.

The first film concluded with a new mole like foe emerging from the ground and its right here that it’s sequel picks up. Has it been worth the wait? It sure has.

Although Toy Story 2 remains the only Pixar sequel to - in this critic’s opinion - better its predecessor, Incredibles 2 is more Finding Dory than Cars 2 in quality.

Heartfelt, funny and a blast of energy, Incredibles 2 is exactly the family blockbuster that you want for the coming summer holidays.

The concept might not be so fresh now but that doesn’t mean viewers of all ages won’t have a great time watching.

Also out this week is a new blockbuster with Dwayne Johnson. Yep, he’s done another one! It would take quite some degree of impressive naivety and optimism to go into Skyscraper expecting a high quality cinematic masterpiece.

However, this is the year in which England are actually a favourite in the World Cup, so anything is possible.

In Skyscraper, Johnson plays a war veteran turned - wait for it - skyscraper safety professional. Yes, his job is to make sure that the world’s tallest buildings are fit for purpose.

When one of the buildings he’s been entrusted with goes to pot, Johnson is blamed for the disaster and must go on the run. Only in a Dwayne Johnson film. There is no reason to expect Skyscraper to be a good film - I’ve yet to see it - but it’s sure to be fun. Oddly, I can’t wait.

A word too for Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo. Re-released for its 60th birthday, this is the film that toppled Citizen Kane from the top of Sight and Sound’s ultimate ‘best films of all time list’. Starring James Stewart, it remains impeccable.

- Toby Symonds