T This heartfelt film, co-directed by Kibwe Tavares and Daniel Kaluuya, features an interesting mix of ingredients. It is set in a chaotic housing estate
Category: Films
Bonus Track review – boy meets boy in sweet route-one romcom
Writer-director Julia Jackman is an award-winner for her short films and now makes her feature debut at the London film festival with this teen romcom,
The Bikeriders review – potent ode to the violent lives of 60s biker gangs
Jeff Nichols’s motorcycle movie is about a love triangle and a succession crisis – inspired by the immersive 1968 study of Chicago bikers by photojournalist
The review of Saltburn suggests that the Brideshead soup is good, but could benefit from additional seasoning.
A Rosamund Pike delivers a delightful performance, while Carey Mulligan makes a wild appearance, making them the standout reasons to enjoy the opening film of
Review of “Red Island” – Exploring the Intersection of Beauty and Colonialism in a French Childhood in Madagascar
F Filmmaker Robin Campillo has embraced the unpredictable nature of memory with his tender, unsentimental, and visually striking creation. Drawing from his own childhood experience
Green Border review – gripping story of refugees’ fight for survival in the forest
At 74, Polish film-maker Agnieszka Holland has lost none of her passion – or compassion – and this brutal, angry, gruelling drama, in sombre black
Sky Peals review – eerie tale of lost souls at the service station
“Do you ever feel that you’re in the wrong place?” asks Adam, the doleful hero of Moin Hussain’s debut film. “Like, if this is the
Evil Does Not Exist review – Ryu Hamaguchi’s enigmatic eco-parable eschews easy explanation
Ryu Hamaguchi’s quietist, enigmatic eco-parable refuses easy explanations and perhaps it refuses difficult explanations as well. It’s a complex drama, a realist film teetering on
The Killer review – terrific David Fincher thriller about a philosophising hitman
D Andrew Kevin Walker adapted the graphic novel by Alexis Nolent for David Fincher’s captivating and addicting samurai crime drama. The film features Michael Fassbender
The Beast review – Léa Seydoux’s audacious drama throbs with fear
Bertrand Bonello’s new film is a vast unsettling dream of the future and the past; it stars Léa Seydoux, whose poise, creamy moue of discontent