Stephen Soucy delves into the creative and personal partnership of Ismail Merchant and James Ivory which produced some of Britain's greatest literary adaptations.
A production of Shakespeare’s Hamlet in online world of Grand Theft Auto became these two actors’ answer to the pandemic’s enforced lockdowns.
This occasionally-vibrant odd couple gay relationship drama is too superficial and silly to leave a lasting mark.
Mark Cousins’ lyrical exploration into the life and work of a little-known modernist painter from Scotland.
This documentary artfully explores familial love, race and belonging through the complex framework of South African history.
Featuring films by Joanna Arnow and Miryam Charles, the inaugural Creative Nonfiction Film Weekend at London's Genesis Cinema celebrates all the strange and creative forms that documentary films can take.
Carla J Easton and Blair Young’s informative documentary about Scotland's unsung musical pioneers strikes an impactful chord.
Will Seefried’s confident debut feature tackles a devastating, overlooked history through queer romance in the 1920s.
A man's complicated relationship with an AI-powered doll is the subject of this oddly moving yet morally grey documentary.
30 years since its initial release, Ayoka Chenzira’s underseen debut feature receives a gorgeous 4K restoration.
Marie Amachoukeli’s second film is a triumph of political and emotional sensitivity in its depiction of a young girl and her nanny.
Facing a marital crisis, a couple venture into the world of polyamory in Selma Vilhunen's Finnish relationship drama.
Two men in search of a better life meet by chance in the Niger Delta – one in the French Foreign Legion, the other a revolutionary with dreams of becoming a dancer.
A young woman's dream gig on television descends into chaos in Amanda Kramer's imaginative new melodrama.
Ukrainian Associated Press journalist Mstyslav Chernov chronicles the the invasion of the port city of Mariupol.
This entertaining documentary celebrates the low-budget action movies of “Uganda’s Quentin Tarantino”, Isaac Nabwana.
Yorgos Lanthimos’ Poor Things and Emerald Fennell’s Saltburn are among the picks of this year’s bumper LFF crop.
Christian Petzold returns with something lighter, funnier and more instantly-lovable than his recent run, bringing regular leading lady Paula Beer along for the ride.
In Leonor Teles's enigmatic second feature, spatial experimentation becomes geographic gap-bridging material.
Ena Sendijarević hits the sweet spot with this offbeat, surreal period piece set on a remote Indonesian island.
Dimitra Vlagopoulou gives a knockout performance in Sofia Exarchou's resort-set second feature about a group of seasonal performers.
D Smith's lively documentary offers a bold exploration of transness, womanhood, Blackness and the sex industry.
A blend of horror and satire unveiling the violent paradoxes of religious hypocrisy and aesthetic expectations.
A teenager from Rotterdam attempts to make amends for totalling his grandmother’s car in Shamira Raphaëla’s fun, uplifting documentary.
Fyzal Boulifa’s second feature bears witness to the the dysfunctional bond between a mother-son duo as they drift through urban Morocco.
Jennifer Lawrence stars as a woman hired to “date” a wealthy couple’s introverted son in Gene Stupnitsky's unfunny comedy.
A new vital work by Patricio Guzmán sees the documentary veteran turn his gaze towards a new generation of Chilean revolutionaries.
Barnaby Thompson celebrates the multifaceted life and work of legendary playwright Noël Coward with a perfunctory profile doc.
Developed alongside her cast of non-professional actors, Erige Sehiri builds an intimate fiction debut set in the Tunisian countryside.
In her second feature, Maryam Touzani fashions a complex tale about love that aptly deals with the complexities of repressed sexuality.
Rebecca Lloyd-Evans and Lisa Selby’s feature documentary aims to explore the interconnected prisms of addiction and unorthodox motherhood.
Amanda Kramer's alluring, neon-lit musical feature sees a newlywed couple catapulted into a queer awakening.
Manuela Martelli's auspicious debut feature unfurls as a searingly intense character study against the backdrop of Pinochet’s Chile.
Christian Petzold returns with something lighter, funnier and more instantly-lovable than his recent run, bringing regular leading lady Paula Beer along for the ride.
The latest from formally-daring German filmmaker Angela Schanelec is an exciting and impenetrable take on the Oedipus myth.
Lila Avilés’ affecting second feature explores the essence of impending loss through the eyes of a young child.
The stories of a French Foreign Legionnaire and a Nigerian guerrilla fighter converge in Giacomo Abbruzzese’s frustrating feature debut.
Patric Chiha loosely interprets Henry James in this hazy, seductive nightclub-set drama.
After two young sisters separated from each other in foster care, the eldest struggles to find her place in the world in Dina Amer's affecting drama.
Laura Poitras' portrait of activist and artist Nan Goldin is a damning indictment of the US pharmaceutical industry and a touching look at a familial tragedy.
This lyrical observational documentary by debutant Victoria Fiore follow’s a young boy growing up on the streets of Naples.
A thriving local queer scene has been steadily emerging in the city of Nicosia thanks to the programmers of Queer Wave and Sessions.
The star of Marie Kreutzer's Corsage reveals the demanding details of portraying an empress.
A home movie becomes an important historical artefact, revealing the devastation of the Holocaust for the Jewish residents of a small Polish town.
Alexandre O Philippe traces the connection between David Lynch and Victor Fleming's The Wizard of Oz.
A charming documentary about Britain’s oldest amateur filmmaking club puts a quintessentially Northern story in the spotlight.
Miryam Charles' debut is a stunning drama that takes direct inspiration from her cousin's unexpected death.
The Chilean director on the very contemporary political and philosophical questions at the core of literary period piece, The Wonder.
Master filmmaker Patricio Guzmán turns his gaze to the enigmatic Andean mountain range as he examines the troubled histories of Chile.
Alli Haapasalo’s vibrant, sex-positive depiction of the highs and lows of modern girlhood is as charming as it is unapologetic.
Luis De Filippis' film is a great addition to a transgender cinematic canon in that it refuses to rely on overt explorations of trauma.
This searingly intense character study sees a woman questioning her cosy bourgeois lifestyle in Pinochet’s Chile.
Eddie Sternberg discusses the risks and challenges of expanding his 2015 short into a feature-length film.
Hanna Bergholm's directorial debut is a cracking, artfully-crafted creature feature set in a gaudy suburban dollhouse.
Joana Pimenta and Adirley Queirós blur fiction and documentary in their hybrid tale of Brazilian resistance, independence and survival.
From Glass Onion to Decision to Leave, this year’s cinematic bonanza is packed to the gills with discovery and delight.
A cautionary tale about environmental exploitation veers into predictability in Lee Haven Jones' slow-burn directorial debut.
A family embarks on a perilous road trip in Iranian director Panah Pahani’s assured, darkly comic debut.
A teenage girl discovers dark family secrets when she investigates the sudden disappearance of her father.
Jay Bedwani presents a captivating portrait of drag icon Donna Personna as she writes a play to commemorate the bravery of her trans sisters.
Jacqueline Lentzou's distinctively poetic debut feature offers a heartfelt study of unconventional family dynamics.
Nick Cave and Warren Ellis perform an intimate yet expansive session at the Battersea Arts Centre. The results are mesmerising.
A former rapper sets up a hip-hop programme for the participants of his local youth group in Nabil Ayouch’s well-meaning drama.
Queercore godhead Bruce LaBruce returns with a wild, camp incest odyssey set in 1970s Quebec.
Tatiana Huezo’s first narrative feature is a masterfully evocative portrait of coming of age in the shadow of Mexico’s narco wars.
In praise of Juho Kuosmanen’s Compartment No. 6 and a scene of human connection around shots of moonshine.
The relationship between the art of filmmaking and the necessity of protest lies at the heart of Payal Kapadia’s spellbinding feature debut.
A Polish documentary explores the history and artistic trauma surrounding Andrzej Żuławski’s fragmented sci-fi magnum opus.
Prescient and deeply affecting Ukraine-set doc exploring the lives of children displaced by the country's 2014 invasion.
Our series on the most spell-binding moments from 2022’s Best Picture Nominees continues with Jane Campion’s tense take on the Old West.
Not even Willem Dafoe’s narration can save this meandering documentary with tired colonial overtones.
A young Iraqi refugee seeks refuge in Bulgaria in writer/director Haider Rashid’s heart-stopping drama.
William E Badgley trains his camera on cult figure Don Letts, chronicling the collision between the UK’s punk and reggae scenes.
Denzel Washington’s fourth directorial effort is a story of love, loss and sacrifice told through the journal of Charles Monroe King.
A bookstore meet-cute leads to a transformative relationship for two gay men in Matthew Fifer and Kieran Mulcare’s drama.
Jessica Chastain’s passion project is a questionable espionage thriller that flaunts its international cast of A-Listers.
This tender and affecting documentary on a visionary of contemporary dance offers a glimpse of the man behind the genius.
This anthology film from director Mohammad Rasoulof explores the social consequences of Iran’s death penalty.
From books and Blu-rays to pins and games, we’ve got your Christmas shopping for movie fans covered.
This fittingly radical documentary chronicles the feminist punk subculture which sprung in London in the 1980s.
How a love of cars, London and UK garage informed the writer/director’s madcap debut feature, Pirates.
This atmospheric World War Two drama from Hungarian director Dénes Nagy is too dour for its own good.
An entertaining deep dive into the adventure-filled travails of famed oceanographer and filmmaker Jacques Cousteau.
Teenage romance blossoms by the seaside in first-time director Marley Morrison’s caravan park-set coming-of-ager.
This gripping biopic of the enigmatic Marc-André Leclerc captures the essence of solo alpine free climbing.
Morality, justice and the limits of the law are explored in this clichéd adaptation of Ferdinand von Schirach’s bestselling novel.
Anne Zohra Berrached’s ’90s-set romance fictionalises the private life of United 93 hijacker Ziad Jarrah and his lover.
A sombre and emotive documentary depicting the painful realities of the Islamic State’s reign of terror.
David Bruckner’s architectural horror stands up to the contemporary challenges of dabbling with ghosts and jump scares.
Writer/director Chris Baugh’s vampire comedy-horror fails to breathe new life into a stale genre.
Manchester International Festival returns to the city, reflecting a broad spectrum of culture, visual arts and performance
The 23th Thessaloniki Documentary Festival showcases a selection of top homegrown talent.