Author and regular Claire Denis collaborator Christine Angot creates a harrowing portrait of a family collectively suppressing its traumas.
Mati Diop offers a creative and moving guide to discussing anti-colonialist action in her very fine follow-up to 2019’s Atlantics.
Claire Denis adapts Denis Johnson’s 1986 novel about love in a time of revolution, with fascinating results.
Claire Denis' romantic thriller is a masterclass in auditory environmental storytelling.
Juliette Binoche and Vincent Lindon deliver the dramatic goods in French master Claire Denis' nuanced exploration of married life.
Helena Wittman’s extraordinary seafaring anti-epic is a prime contender for the big prize at the 2022 Locarno Film Festival.
Claire Denis adapts Denis Johnson’s 1986 novel about love in a time of revolution – with fascinating, if not entirely successful, results.
In an ambitious venture, we count down our favourite wholly-original feature films of the last two decades.
This year’s stacked line-up also includes new work Kelly Reichardt, Ruben Ostlünd and Park Chan-wook – but no David Lynch.
Juliette Binoche and Vincent Lindon play a couple whose relationship is tested by the arrival of an old friend in Claire Denis’ latest.
A lowkey but interesting line-up comprises the selection for Berlinale’s 72nd edition.
The onetime Rocketman is poised to star alongside Margaret Qualley in The Stars at Noon.
With Wes Anderson, Leos Carax and Paul Verhoeven locked in, we’re ready to keep the rumour mill turning.
A.I., American Psycho and Bamboozled all make the final part of our list – but what will come out on top?
Find out how Little White Lies contributors voted in our critical survey of recent non-IP cinema.
The Stars at Noon sticks both actors in 1984 Nicaragua, mid-revolution.
Counting down our favourite feature-length releases from the past 12 months.