T2 Trainspotting

(Image credit: Jaap Buitendijk)

Starring Ewan McGregor as an Edinburgh drug addict, Danny Boyle's anarchic 1996 adaptation of Irving Welsh's cult novel Trainspotting was one of the decade's most iconic and exhilarating movies

Starring Ewan McGregor as an Edinburgh drug addict, Danny Boyle's anarchic 1996 adaptation of Irving Welsh's cult novel Trainspotting was one of the decade's most iconic and exhilarating movies.

Pulling off a successful sequel was always going to be a tall order, but Boyle and his reunited stars have done it with a movie that tears into its characters' nostalgia for the past - and our own - with darkly comic gusto.

Twenty years have passed and McGregor's Renton returns to Edinburgh from Amsterdam, looking to make amends with the pals he ripped off over a drug deal two decades earlier.

As you might expect, his reunions with Ewen Bremner's desperate Spud, Jonny Lee Miller's sardonic Sick Boy and Robert Carlyle's psychotic Begbie are highly combustible.

Now middle-aged, they are certainly older – but not necessarily any wiser.

This gives an ironic edge to a series of nods to the first film, starting with an opening scene that finds Renton pounding away on a gym treadmill rather than sprinting hell-for-leather through the Edinburgh streets.

Boyle's customary visual swagger is much in evidence, yet if T2 doesn't entirely recapture its predecessor's giddy rush, well, that surely is the point.