Step away from the budget bath set – we've got all your film fan gift ideas covered.
We celebrate the awesome power of RaMell Ross’s masterful, audacious adaptation of a Pulitzer Prize-winner.
With a screen career dating back to 1961, the groundwork for Dench's most famous roles was laid in some of her early appearances.
With the beginning of the noughties now over two decade ago, we're entering a new era for nostalgia – but how do filmmakers crack the code?
Based inside various hospitals across the UK, MediCinema recognises the power of movies for people undergoing medical treatment.
Dismissed as inferior by dedicated print enthusiasts yet a mainstay of cinemas around the world – we talk to cinema workers about the pros and cons of digital as a format.
A new exhibition at the ICA explores the role of typography in Jean-Luc Godard's filmography.
Despite less than 2% of Ireland speaking the language on a daily basis, more and more filmmakers are showing an interest in how Gaeilge can be incorporated into cinema.
The comic-cum-filmmaker is Mike Leigh for the digital age.
By Cat Searcey
In his stop-motion adaptation of Roald Dahl's classic caper, Wes Anderson highlights the necessity of overcoming a fear of change.
In two of 2024's best films – Bird and On Becoming A Guinea Fowl – reality blurs with fantasy when the world becomes too cruel to stand.
With screen-to-stage adaptations popping up in the West End every week, what's caused the theatre world to rely so heavily on cinema for source material?
By Chloe Walker
One of the greatest actors of all time found a compelling niche starring in some of the decade's zaniest high-concept thrillers.
By Emma Cieslik
A crucial tool for visually impaired cinema lovers yet often undervalued by the industry, it's about time that audio description's worth is heard.
Erika Lust's C*m With Me tour celebrates 20 years of the filmmaker's work, but how can welcoming porn back into cinemas challenge audience attitudes?
By Tyler Thier
This Halloween, no body horror fiction can compare to the haunting revelations of Brakhage's 32-minute film The Act of Seeing with One's Own Eyes.
The latest short film from the independent animation legend is an elusive oddity even by Don Hertzfeldt's standards.