The enduring friendship between the actors Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman was unpacked in irreverent detail in London on Friday, as the pair premiered their
Category: Films
‘A magical being’: Shelley Duvall remembered by Woody Allen, Daryl Hannah and Michael Palin
‘She gave me reports on last night’s date with Paul Simon’ Woody Allen, writer, director, co-star, Annie Hall (1977) We cast Shelley Duvall as the
‘I saw In Bed with Madonna 50 times. I’d never seen guys kissing before’: Levan Akin on formative films, trans rights and usurping his heroes
To say that Levan Akin’s experience of making his new film, Crossing, was more tranquil than his previous one, And Then We Danced, is a
Divorce in the Black review – Tyler Perry’s dull drama is his worst to date
When you see a title like Divorce in the Black appear underneath a Tyler Perry byline, you assume this is more not-so-clever wordplay that clumsily
Shelley Duvall was a sublime and subversive screen presence | Peter Bradshaw
It was Shelley Duvall’s destiny to become most widely known for a single film or maybe for a single poster image from it, shockingly and
‘Identity is more unstable than ever’: Riz Ahmed on new short film Dammi
Sometimes the smallest projects are the most interesting. That may well be the case for Riz Ahmed’s newest film: a 16-minute short called Dammi, directed
Shelley Duvall, star of The Shining and Annie Hall, dies aged 75
Shelley Duvall, the much-loved US character actor and star of films such as The Shining, Annie Hall and Popeye, has died shortly after her 75th
‘Are you rich in goats?’: chronicling the extraordinary work of Bhutan’s ‘happiness surveyors’
How often do you get angry? Are you prone to envy? Are you rich in goats? These are the questions Amber Kumar Gurung is employed
Eno review – stimulating and cerebral look at the high priest of art-tech experimentalism
If anyone could get away with presenting a “generative documentary” rather than a bog-standard bio-doc, it would have to be Brian Eno, the high priest
The Commandant’s Shadow review – family of Auschwitz commander bring healing to death-camp survivor
The first shock delivered by this engrossing documentary is probably the queasy jolt of recognition. Hans Jürgen Höss, the now elderly son of the Nazi