FOUR lads, four girls and sun, sea and sex in Greece – The Inbetweeners hit the big screen. Harry Potter is back so it’s not quite the end and Harrison and Daniel shoot it out with aliens.

Odeon, Dumfries Lonsdale, Annan

It’s a light week at the Odeon in Dumfries next week with the kids being taken up to the end of the holidays with Spy Kids 4: All The Time In the World (PG), the latest in the series from director Robert Rodriguez who used to make blood-splattered thrillers.

It’s the same formula with Jessica Alba as a retired special agent getting back into the thick of it with her stepkids to save the world from supervillain, the Timekeeper.

Both the 2D and 3D versions are on show.

At both cinemas The Inbetweeners Movie (15) is the spin-off from the Channel Four TV series and fills the evening slots. School’s out and Will, Joe, Jay and Blake head for sun and fun in Crete where they meet up with four girls.

A perfect match you might say but these are the original sad saps heading for every embarrassing moment you can think of.

Expect it to be rude and crude – the classic Brits on holiday crassness.

Robert Burns Centre Film Theatre, Dumfries

Just when you thought that it was all over, Harry Potter pops up again tonight, tomorrow and next Tuesday and Wednesday.

So if you have yet to see Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 (12A) then this is the last chance to see it in the cinema before the Blu-ray special edition box sets flood the shops in a few months time.

It is a worthy climax to the mighty saga and, while it is a gloomy piece with the final confrontation with Voldemort (Ralf Feinnes minus a nose) claiming old friends as victims, JK Rowling is really quite savage with her characters, the final battle as spectacular as you could wish and the emotional conflict as Harry confronts his destiny is caught perfectly by Daniel Radcliffe.

On Thursday as part of a special dance event Breath Made Visible is a documentary about the life and career of the innovative dancer Anna Halprin. Her message is that dance has the power to transform, teach and heal.

Lonsdale, Annan

The idea of mixing a traditional western with sci-fi fantasy may seem an odd mix but it works in Cowboys and Aliens (12A) and you get Indians too.

Daniel Craig sheds his Bond image effortlessly as an outlaw with a memory lapse who turns up in the local town of Absolution, like that man with no name.

The town is run by a crusty rancher, Colonel Dolarhyde (Harrison Ford), but before they can draw their six shooters the main street is blown up by alien space ships.

How and why makes for an action-packed thrill ride that is short on comedy but high on adrenaline as the bug-eyed monsters round up the locals like cattle. Ford and Craig make a great team.

The Smurfs (U), Horrid Henry (U) and Cars 2 (U) complete the line up to take the kids to the end of the holidays.