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round up
Cinema / 25 June 2026
25 June 2026

ANDY HEDGECOCK, FIONA O’CONNOR and MARIA DUARTE review The Last Viking, Blue Heron, 500 Miles, How To Live On Earth, and Supergirl

Jodie
Film of the Week / 25 June 2026
25 June 2026

MARIA DUARTE goes down a bilingual rabbit hole with an impressive Jodie Foster

fotw
Film of the week / 21 May 2026
21 May 2026

ANDY HEDGECOCK is astonished by a portrait of contemporary Greece, complete with political protest, organised crime and people trafficking, told from the point of view of — wait for it — runaway poultry

fotw
Film Of The Week / 14 May 2026
14 May 2026

LEO BOIX recommends a film that portrays how fascism feeds on ignorance, machismo and myth in isolated communities abandoned by the state

Olive Gray as Maria and Slavko Sobin as Vlad in Surviving Earth / Pic IMDb
Film of the week / 23 April 2026
23 April 2026

ANDY HEDGECOCK recommends a gripping and touching drama, based on a true story, about a Serbian refugee rebuilding his life in Bristol

round up
Cinema / 19 March 2026
19 March 2026

JOHN GREEN, MICHAL BONCZA and BELLA KATZ review The Good Boy, Broken English, and Don't Be Prey

fotw
Film of the week / 19 March 2026
19 March 2026

ANDY HEDGECOCK peers into the US psyche to find deluded ambition, toxic aggression and an obsession with fame

MEMORABLE: Robert de Niro in Taxi Driver / pic IMDb
Culture / 16 March 2026
16 March 2026

Taxi Driver at 50: Martin Scorsese’s film remains a troubling reflection of our times, writes ALEXANDER HOWARD

cuba ff
Screen Cuba Film Festival 2026 / 6 March 2026
6 March 2026

In the face of Trump’s brutal aggression, DODIE WEPPLER and TRISH MEEHAN invite you to share some of the masterpieces of Cuban cinema

Berlin FF
Berlin Film Festival 2026 / 24 February 2026
24 February 2026

RITA DI SANTO points out that political films at Cannes, and overtly pro-Palestinian statements by film-makers, contradict the apolitical stance of the jury

round up
Cinema / 19 February 2026
19 February 2026

JOHN GREEN, MARIA DUARTE and ANGUS REID review Fukushima: A Nuclear Nightmare, Man on the Run, If I Had Legs I’d Kick You, and Cold Storage

fotw
Film of the Week / 29 January 2026
29 January 2026

JOHN GREEN savours an elegy to black farmers in the deep south of the US: a vanishing way of life redolent with poetic and political meaning

round up
Cinema / 22 January 2026
22 January 2026

MARIA DUARTE and MICHAL BONCZA review The History of Sound, H Is For Hawk, Saipan, and Mercy

fotw
Film of the week / 18 December 2025
18 December 2025

MARIA DUARTE is swept along by the cocky self-belief of a ping-pong hustler in a surprisingly violent drama

el gouna
El Gouna Film Festival 2025 / 4 November 2025
4 November 2025

RITA DI SANTO points out the social experience of exploitation and oppression that inform the popular winners at this year’s festival

palestine 36
Film of the Week / 30 October 2025
30 October 2025

ANDY HEDGECOCK recommends a cinematic glimpse of the role of the British in establishing the zionist state

REBELS: Ebada Hassan and Safiyya Ingar in Nadia Fall’s powerful debut feature Brides [Pic: IMDb]
Cinema / 25 September 2025
25 September 2025

MARIA DUARTE, LEO BOIX and ANGUS REID review Brides, Dead of Winter, A Night Like This, and The Librarians

one battle
Film of the Week / 25 September 2025
25 September 2025

MARIA DUARTE is entertained by a wry portrait of befuddled resistance to US authoritarianism

round up
Cinema / 14 August 2025
14 August 2025

MARIA DUARTE and ANGUS REID review Materialists, Unmoored, Together, and Bambi: A Tale of Life in The Woods

cannes
Cannes Film Festival 2025 / 30 May 2025
30 May 2025

RITA DI SANTO reports on the films from Iran, Spain, Belgium and Brazil that won the top awards

round up
Cinema / 29 May 2025
29 May 2025

The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Along Came Love, The Ballad of Wallis Island, The Ritual, and Karate Kid: Legends

fotw
Film of the Week / 29 May 2025
29 May 2025

MARIA DUARTE recommends the powerful dramatisation of the true story of a husband and wife made homeless

backlash
Cinema / 8 May 2025
8 May 2025

The Star's critics MARIA DUARTE and MICHAL BONCZA review Backlash: The Murder of George Floyd, The Uninvited, The Surfer, and Motel Destino

Maiwene Barthelemy and Clément Faveau in Holy Cow
Cinema / 10 April 2025
10 April 2025
The Star's critics ANDY HEDGECOCK, MARTIN HALL, MICHAL BONCZA, ANGUS REID reviews Holy Cow, One to One: John and Yoko, King of Kings, Panda Bear in Africa
(L) REDISCOVERED ALLIES: The Sinking of the Lisbon Maru; (R)
Cinema / 20 March 2025
20 March 2025
The Star's critics review The Sinking Of The Lisbon Maru, Two Strangers Trying Not To Kill Each Other, American Dreamer, When Autumn Falls, and Flow
BLOOD ON THE TRACKS: Xilun Sun as the mysterious interloper
Film of the Week: / 20 March 2025
20 March 2025
ANGUS REID recommends an exquisite drama about the disturbing impact of the one child policy in contemporary China
Film of the Week: / 27 February 2025
27 February 2025
MARIA DUARTE recommends an homage to the iconic showgirl that understands them as working-class women 
HAUNTING: Lucy Liu in Presence
Cinema / 24 January 2025
24 January 2025
The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Presence, Flight Risk, Emanuelle and Back in Action
THE REAL THING: Joan Baez and Bob Dylan, Civil Rights March
Opinion / 21 January 2025
21 January 2025
DAVID YEARSLEY compares Timothee Chalamet’s impersonation of Dylan to the real thing
STUNNING: Ethan Herisse and Brandon Turner in Nickel Boys
Cinema / 10 January 2025
10 January 2025
The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Nickel Boys, Bank of Dave 2: The Loan Ranger, Babygirl, and Maria
LAS VEGAS HERE WE COME: Mark Eidelshtein and Mikey Madison,
Cinema / 31 October 2024
31 October 2024
The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Anora, Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story, Blitz, and Heretic
(L) Saoirse Ronan in The Outrun; (R) Shia LaBeouf in Megalop
Cinema / 26 September 2024
26 September 2024
Decline and fall of the US empire, rehab in Orkney, the younger self, and lone wolves
(L) Speak No Evil; (Centre) The Queen Of My Dreams; (R) My F
Cinema / 12 September 2024
12 September 2024
Iranian late-bloomers, holiday chums, the poison pen, and Pakistani lesbians: The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews My Favourite Cake, Speak No Evil, The Critic, and The Queen Of My Dreams
NAZIDAMMERUNG: Marion Cotillard in Lee
Film of the Week: / 12 September 2024
12 September 2024
MARIA DUARTE recommends the story of surrealist turned photojournalist Lee Miller
(L) The Brutalist, directed by Brady Corbet; (R) Youth Homec
Venice Film Festival 2024 / 9 September 2024
9 September 2024
RITA DI SANTO selects seven of the best films from this year’s line-up to watch for in cinemas
IMPERIAL DECADENCE: Caligula
Cinema / 8 August 2024
8 August 2024
Domestic abuse, orgies revisited, baby trouble, and Hollywood claptrap: MARIA DUARTE reviews It Ends With Us, Caligula: The Ultimate Cut, Babes, and Borderlands
Agent of Happiness
Cinema / 11 July 2024
11 July 2024
Happy sadface, moonshot scullduggery, trouble sleeping and Cage animal: The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Agent of Happiness, Fly Me To The Moon, Sleep, and Longlegs
Features / 22 June 2024
22 June 2024
The award-winning documentary on British anti-apartheid heroes has already sparked passionate discussions — now trade unions and progressives must integrate it into training and education courses, argues ROGER McKENZIE
Marvin Hagler (r) catches Alan Minter (l) with a vicious rig
Men's Boxing / 21 June 2024
21 June 2024
JOHN WIGHT on boxing legends make such great film subjects
THE REAL THING: Abdellatif Masstouri and Ayoub Elaid in Houn
Cinema / 13 June 2024
13 June 2024
Posh environmentalism, Moroccan lumpenproletariat, US survivalism and cartoon adolescence
Anthony Hopkins as Sigmund Freud
Film of the Week: / 13 June 2024
13 June 2024
MARIA DUARTE recommends a drama that brings together a superstar Atheist and a born-again Christian in a psychoanalytic consulting room
CONQUERING FEARS: (L) Young Woman and the Sea; (R) Sting
Cinema / 30 May 2024
30 May 2024
Channel swimming, forgetting the ex-bf, therapeutic cycling and scary spiders: The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Young Woman and the Sea, The Beast, Hard Miles, and Sting
NO HUMAN NEEDED? Editing, storyboarding and animation all fa
Features / 8 May 2024
8 May 2024
After the recent writers' and actors' strikes, the bosses in film and TV are embracing the cost-cutting potential of AI even faster than before — barely acknowledging that what they will be cutting is livelihoods, writes DENNIS BROE
HUMAN VALUES: Lina Soualem’s documentary, Bye Bye Tiberias
El Gouna Film Festival 2023 / 28 December 2023
28 December 2023
RITA DI SANTO visits El Gouna film festival in Egypt to witness a programme of films and discussions in solidarity with Palestinians
PRELUDE TO INDIANA JONES: (Above) Eadweard Muybridge: Arab H
Science and Society / 11 October 2023
11 October 2023
ROX MIDDLETON and LIAM SHAW examine the early scientific investigations that enabled film to become an artistic medium
Lola Campbell as Georgie in Scrapper
Film of the Week: / 24 August 2023
24 August 2023
MARIA DUARTE is delighted by a coming of age story, that goes in reverse
Color photograph of the Trinity test, 15 July 1945; J. Rober
Opinion / 24 July 2023
24 July 2023
CAROL TURNER points out the failure of the film Oppenheimer to face up to the real-life consequences of nuclear warfare
(L to R) Barry Ward as Leon and Liam Carney as Iver
Cinema / 15 June 2023
15 June 2023
MARIA DUARTE reviews of Sunlight, You Can Live Forever, Inland and Greatest Days
Alexandra Burke as and Natey Jones as Travis
Film of the Week: / 15 June 2023
15 June 2023
MARIA DUARTE recommends an intelligent exploration of family conflict and taboo subjects
Ken Loach's The Old Oak (left) and Aki Kaurismaki’s Fallen
Film Festival / 29 May 2023
29 May 2023
Star critic RITA DI SANTO recommends two outstanding depictions of working-class lives in England and Finland as the pick of the bunch
Leaving to Remain
Film of the Week / 27 April 2023
27 April 2023
MARIA DUARTE recommends the inside story of what happens when Roma people are rescued from discrimination
Marie Colomb in The Beasts (2022)
Film / 23 March 2023
23 March 2023
MARIA DUARTE is gripped by a complex thriller set amidst the rural beauties and resentments of Spanish Galicia
QUALITY CARE: a scene from Alan Bennet's Allelujah
Film / 16 March 2023
16 March 2023
MARIA DUARTE recommends a film that unashamedly wears its heart on its sleeve
REVOLUTIONARY: (L to R) De Cierta Manera (One Way or Another
Cinema / 6 March 2023
6 March 2023
YAHILY HERNANDEZ PORTO interviews film historian Garcia Yero and prize-winning author Luis Alvarez Alvarez about the extraordinary achievement of Sara Gomez, the rediscovered star of revolutionary Cuban cinema
MEMORABLE: Chrissie, Shake Hands and Loggo from Boys from th
BenchMarx / 3 March 2023
3 March 2023
JOHN GREEN reflects on the history of working-class access to broadcast media
(L to R) Ali Junejo and Alina Khan in Joyland
Cinema / 24 February 2023
24 February 2023
The Star's film critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Joyland, What's Love Got To Do With It, Cocaine Bear and Creature
Cate Blanchett as Lydia Tar in Todd Field's film TAR
Film of the Week: / 12 January 2023
12 January 2023
Despite the film’s length, MARIA DUARTE is impressed by Cate Blanchett’s portrayal of a groundbreaking conductor at the height of her powers
Mariana Trevino as Marisol and Tom Hanks as Otto Anderson
Cinema / 5 January 2023
5 January 2023
MARIA DUARTE reviews of A Man Called Otto, Piggy and The Enforcer
(L to R) Toby Jones as Norman and Olivia Colman as Hilary
Film of the Week / 5 January 2023
5 January 2023
MARIA DUARTE recommends a personal testimony of human endurance in the face of adversity
ALONE TOGETHER: (Left) Lokita (Joely Mbundi) and Tori (Pablo
Film of the Week / 1 December 2022
1 December 2022
MARIA DUARTE recommends a heartbreaking film about two young children from Africa, who must endure the inhumanity of Europe’s attitude to refugees
A scene from Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio
Cinema / 24 November 2022
24 November 2022
The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Bones And All, Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery, Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio and Utama
EXISTENTIAL THREAT: The closing of marketplaces and the erad
Film / 24 November 2022
24 November 2022
(L to R) Saudi General Ahmad Asiri confronted by protesters;
Documentary Film Review / 3 November 2022
3 November 2022
WILL STONE recommends a must-see documentary that exposes the shameful double standards at the heart of British governance
Aline Küppenheim as Carmen and Nicolas Sepulveda as Elias
BFI London Film Festival 2022 / 18 October 2022
18 October 2022
MARIA DUARTE’S attention is caught by three films in which strong and determined women confront prejudice, misogyny and repressive legislation
EFFERVESCENT: Blind Ambition
Cinema / 11 August 2022
11 August 2022
Maria Duarte reviews Blind Ambition, Where is Anne Frank, Eiffel, and Between Two Dawns
Film Of The Week: / 30 June 2022
30 June 2022
MARIA DUARTE recommends a chilling dramatisation of a gun massacre that ravaged a Tasmanian town in 1996, and which highlights how easily another mass shooting could happen in Australia today.
Khansa as Mohammad
Cinema / 16 June 2022
16 June 2022
RITA DI SANTO reels off her disappointment at Sundance 2022 Festival's tedious mediocrity
Udo Kier in Swan Song
Cinema / 9 June 2022
9 June 2022
The Star's critic Maria Duarte reviews Swan Song, Leave No Traces, All My Friends Hate Me and Jurassic World: Dominion
(L to R) Baptiste Sornin, Pablo Schils as Tori and Mbundu Jo
Film Festival / 29 May 2022
29 May 2022
Although impressed by the overall quality of the films on offer, RITA DI SANTO believes Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne’s Tori and Lokita merited the Palme D’Or
Film Of The Week / 26 May 2022
26 May 2022
MARIA DUARTE recommends a film exploring the punishing world of work endured by poor women in France, and the ethical questions raised by seeking to highlight their plight
Film Of The Week: / 10 March 2022
10 March 2022
MARIA DUARTE recommends a dark comedy set in a blue collar US town on the cusp of the Trump era
Jim Broadbent in The Duke
Film of the Week / 24 February 2022
24 February 2022
MARIA DUARTE recommends a film celebrating the man who stole a masterpiece from the National Gallery in his campaign for free TV licences for the elderly
Film Of The Week: / 10 February 2022
10 February 2022
MARIA DUARTE recommends a heart-wrenching, animated documentary about an Afghan refugee’s flight to Denmark, where he comes to terms with his past, and himself
BLURRED VISION: (L to R) Gierek among workers, in the film,
Opinion / 1 February 2022
1 February 2022
ETHAN CHAN casts a critical eye on the recently released film Gierek - a confusing cinematic story about the controversial communist leader of Poland of the 1970s
(L to R) Benedict Cumberbatch and Jesse Plemons as Phil and
Opinion / 19 January 2022
19 January 2022
JONAH RASKIN meditates about the periodic, Phoenix-like rise of the genre that was once a Hollywood staple
Jeremy Irons as Neville Chamberlain
Opinion / 9 January 2022
9 January 2022
JOHN GREEN takes issue with critics’ praise for a biopic that glosses over facts to paint a fake and revisionist picture
George MacKay in Munich — The Edge of War
Film Of The Week / 6 January 2022
6 January 2022
MARIA DUARTE is intrigued by a gripping what-if tale based on the fateful Munich Agreement between Chamberlain and Hitler in 1938
A screenshot from Matthew Heineman's The First Wave
Cinema / 25 November 2021
25 November 2021
The Star's critics Van Conner and Maria Duarte review The First Wave, Encanto, Lapwing, Rebel Dykes and Dying to Divorce
Adam Driver (left) as Maurizio Gucci and Lady Gaga as Patriz
Film Of The Week / 25 November 2021
25 November 2021
MARUA DUARTE recommends the stranger-than-fiction story of the rise and fall of the Gucci family’s billion-dollar fashion empire
PREDICTABLE NOMEN OMEN: ‘Vadimir’ (Dave Bautista) as lea
OPINION / 1 November 2021
1 November 2021
Dune is a prophetic tale about the environmental apocalypse that boundless Western greed has subjected the Earth to in 21st century, writes OLI MOULD
Film Of The Week: / 16 September 2021
16 September 2021
MARIA DUARTE recommends a shocking documentary about the ecological devastation caused by the intensive agriculture which feeds our desire for meat and dairy products
FILM OF THE WEEK / 28 July 2021
28 July 2021
Poignant, yet shot through with deadpan comedy, Limbo is a telling account of the harsh experiences of asylum-seekers, says MARIA DUARTE
Jean Dujardin (left) in Deerskin
CINEMA / 15 July 2021
15 July 2021
Reviews of Deerskin, Nowhere Special, The Croods 2: A New Age, Space Jam: A New Legacy, Fear Street: 1666, The Forever Purge, Escape Room: Tournament of Champions, Two of Us
FILM OF THE WEEK / 15 July 2021
15 July 2021
MARIA DUARTE recommends a fascinating documentary about a revolutionary black music festival that was deliberately ignored by the media
Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth in Supernova
FILM OF THE WEEK / 24 June 2021
24 June 2021
MARIA DUARTE recommends a heart-wrenching love story about a couple on a final road trip across the Lake District
SENDING A MESSAGE: Dan Edelstyn and Hilary Powell
FILM OF THE WEEK / 26 May 2021
26 May 2021
MARIA DUARTE recommends a timely exposé of the insidious financial practice of buying and selling debts
ENGAGING: My New York Year
Culture / 20 May 2021
20 May 2021
Reviews of State Funeral, My New York Year, Rare Beasts, Spiral, Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway and Army of the Dead
SURREAL: Some Kind of Heaven
CINEMA / 13 May 2021
13 May 2021
Reviews of Some Kind of Heaven, Those Who Wish Me Dead, Undergods and Servants
CINEMA / 25 March 2021
25 March 2021
Reviews of Six Minutes To Midnight, Retaliation, The Banishing, Memories of My Father, Made in Italy and Malmkrog
Maurice and Suzy
Film Of The Week / 18 March 2021
18 March 2021
MARIA DUARTE is moved by a complex and fascinating love letter from a filmmaker son to his photographer father
Film of the Week: / 4 March 2021
4 March 2021
Maria Duarte watches a chilling and powerful documentary about the assassination of Saudi journalist, Jamal Khashoggi
CINEMA / 18 February 2021
18 February 2021
Reviews of White Colour Black, Bad Tales, Sator and Burn it All
FILM OF THE WEEK / 18 February 2021
18 February 2021
MARIA DUARTE recommends a film about the chilling lengths some people will go to exploit the elderly and vulnerable — as long they don’t fight back
CINEMA / 12 February 2021
12 February 2021
Reviews of Barb & Star Go To Vista Del Mar, Dead Pigs, PVT CHAT and Willy’s Wonderland
Film of the Week / 4 February 2021
4 February 2021
MARIA DUARTE’S mind is blown by the world of simulation theory, and the people who believe they’re living in The Matrix
CINEMA / 28 January 2021
28 January 2021
Reviews of The Dig, Twist, Assassins and Synchronic
CINEMA / 14 January 2021
14 January 2021
Van Connor and Maria Duarte review Dear Comrades!, Blithe Spirit, Outside the Wire, Stardust, and Imperial Blue
FILM OF THE WEEK / 14 January 2021
14 January 2021
MARIA DUARTE recommends a fictional reimagining of the night that four icons met – at a pivotal moment in the civil rights movement
PROTECTING CAPITAL NOT JOBS: (Left) Lobbying TUC general mee
FILM REVIEW / 12 January 2021
12 January 2021
JOHN GREEN recommends an outstanding film on the battle between printworkers and the Murdoch media empire
Joe Glenton (left) interviewing the families of those killed
Film of the Week / 4 December 2020
4 December 2020
Kill or Capture: Inside the CIA’s Secret Afghan Army
Overseas by Sung-A Yoon
Film of the Week / 26 November 2020
26 November 2020
Maria Duarte is moved by a harrowing documentary about Filipino overseas domestic workers, far from home and their families, who face appalling treatment at the hands of their employers
Film Of The Week / 9 September 2020
9 September 2020
The Roads Not Taken is a poignant study of a writer struggling with dementia, says MARIA DUARTE
FILM OF THE WEEK / 2 September 2020
2 September 2020
MARIA DUARTE sees a film made on a shoestring which punches way above its weight
Film Of The Week / 19 August 2020
19 August 2020
MARIA DUARTE recommends a film on the harsh consequences of a young girl’s struggle for independence in Iran
CINEMA / 22 July 2020
22 July 2020
Reviews of Saint Frances, Stage Mother, The Traitor, American Fighter and CoinCoin and the Extra-Humans
Lise Leplat Prudhomme as Joan of Arc
Film Of The Week / 18 June 2020
18 June 2020
Lise Leplat Prudhomme excels in her second outing as the Maid of Orleans, says MARIA DUARTE
Features / 1 May 2020
1 May 2020
LUCY PARKER's award-winning documentary reveals the determination of activists to obtain justice for blacklisted construction workers and the alarming involvement of undercover police
FILM OF THE WEEK / 22 April 2020
22 April 2020
MARIA DUARTE recommends a film on the apartheid regime's brutal treatment of a young gay army conscript
FILM OF THE WEEK / 11 March 2020
11 March 2020
MARIA DUARTE recommends a film on the women whose actions triggered the demise of the global beauty-contest industry
Film Of The Week / 4 December 2019
4 December 2019
MARIA DUARTE sees a thriller set in 1950s New York which, unusually, tackles social and political issues
Film Of The Week / 6 November 2019
6 November 2019
Martin Scorsese's lengthy epic of gangster goings-on boasts great performances from a string of Hollywood greats, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 19 September 2019
19 September 2019
MARIA DUARTE and ALAN FRANK review The Kitchen and Ad Astra
Film Of The Week / 18 September 2019
18 September 2019
That’s the poignant theme of an excellent comedy drama as relatives attempt to hide the truth of her impending demise from a feisty matriarch, says MARIA DUARTE
Film review / 2 September 2019
2 September 2019
PETER LAZENBY recommends an inspiring new documentary on the Durham Miners’ Gala
Film Of The Week / 8 August 2019
8 August 2019
MARIA DUARTE is uplifted by a comedy that tackles racism head on
Film Of The Week / 5 August 2019
5 August 2019
MARIA DUARTE recommends a gripping Spanish political thriller that will resonate with anybody interested in local politics
Film Of The Week / 5 June 2019
5 June 2019
Burning issues come to the fore in the story of a young mother horrifically disfigured by an abusive partner, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 13 March 2019
13 March 2019
MARIA DUARTE recommends a bitter-sweet comedy about love, pretentiousness in the art world and the perils of film-making
Sudabeh Mortezai’s Joy won the Best Film award
London Film Festival 2018 / 22 October 2018
22 October 2018
Maria Duarte believes the 62nd edition of the festival has, without being memorable, provided some outstanding offerings
Sceptical: Maxine Peake as Nellie in Peterloo
Film Review / 18 October 2018
18 October 2018
Mike Leigh's stirring film on the 1819 massacre in Manchester has striking contemporary resonances, says PAUL FOLEY
Film of the week / 17 October 2018
17 October 2018
That's the question posed by a documentary on the search for an exit strategy from the Trump-era madness, reports MARIA DUARTE
Venice Film Festival 2018 / 10 September 2018
10 September 2018
Film Of The Week / 1 March 2018
1 March 2018
MARIA DUARTE recommends a quirky comedy about a games night with murderous consequences
Matt Damon in Downsizing
Film Of The Week / 25 January 2018
25 January 2018
MARIA DUARTE remains unconvinced by a sci-fi satire positing miniaturisation as the answer to global overpopulation
Film of the Week / 14 December 2017
14 December 2017
The latest intergalactic extravaganza is top-drawer, says ALAN FRANK
Culture / 10 August 2017
10 August 2017
MARIA DUARTE recommends a no-holds-barred biopic of artist Tom of Finland
Culture / 27 July 2017
27 July 2017
Culture / 15 July 2017
15 July 2017
CHRIS JURY, co-founder of the Tolpuddle Radical Film Festival, draws inspiration from a new generation of artists taking on the political and artistic establishments
Culture / 15 June 2017
15 June 2017
ALAN FRANK recommends a hallucinatory trip through a troubled Asian country, and we look at the other films of the week
Culture / 25 May 2017
25 May 2017
Culture / 4 May 2017
4 May 2017
Culture / 20 April 2017
20 April 2017
MARIA DUARTE enjoys a film with a feminist focus on the role of women during WWII
Culture / 20 April 2017
20 April 2017
Culture / 17 April 2017
17 April 2017
Culture / 17 April 2017
17 April 2017
Culture / 17 April 2017
17 April 2017
Culture / 17 April 2017
17 April 2017
Culture / 17 April 2017
17 April 2017
Culture / 17 April 2017
17 April 2017
Culture / 6 April 2017
6 April 2017
MARIA DUARTE isn’t wholly convinced by a fanciful biopic of Chilean bard Pablo Neruda
Culture / 5 April 2017
5 April 2017
A major retrospective of films by Rainer Werner Fassbinder confirms
Culture / 30 March 2017
30 March 2017
MARIA DUARTE recommends a film on the consequences of corruption in Romania
Britain / 7 March 2017
7 March 2017
Culture / 2 March 2017
2 March 2017
ALAN FRANK recommends a film about India on the cusp of independence
Culture / 22 February 2017
22 February 2017
Culture / 2 February 2017
2 February 2017
MARIA DUARTE recommends the inspiring story of a couple who defied racist marriage laws
Culture / 5 January 2017
5 January 2017
Zero Days is a disturbing film on the universal threat posed by state-created computer viruses, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 5 January 2017
5 January 2017
Culture / 22 December 2016
22 December 2016
Star columnists run through what has — and hasn’t —impressed them on the big screen in the last 12 months
Culture / 16 December 2016
16 December 2016
A film on a young boy whose nightmares come to life is one of the best of the year, says ALAN FRANK. Plus a round-up of the rest of the week’s releases with MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 9 December 2016
9 December 2016
MARIA DUARTE reviews Oliver Stone’s new biopic SNOWDEN and we cast an eye over the rest of the week’s releases
Culture / 6 December 2016
6 December 2016
John Pilger’s 60th film is a warning to the world, says BEN CHACKO
Culture / 1 December 2016
1 December 2016
MARIA DUARTE sees Tom Hanks rescue the reputation of a heroic pilot
Culture / 1 December 2016
1 December 2016
Culture / 24 November 2016
24 November 2016
A United Kingdom is a powerful tale of inter-racial love, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 24 November 2016
24 November 2016
Culture / 17 November 2016
17 November 2016
Culture / 10 November 2016
10 November 2016
Culture / 3 November 2016
3 November 2016
MARIA DUARTE recommends an update on the ongoing havoc wreaked on a Scottish community by the US mogul
Culture / 28 October 2016
28 October 2016
Culture / 27 October 2016
27 October 2016
A potentially nuanced take on the nature v nurture debate is marred by sentimentality, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 27 October 2016
27 October 2016
Culture / 24 October 2016
24 October 2016
Culture / 20 October 2016
20 October 2016
Ken Loach’s film on austerity Britain makes the blood boil, says ALAN FRANK
Culture / 20 October 2016
20 October 2016
Culture / 13 October 2016
13 October 2016
MARIA DUARTE recommends a docudrama exploring an on-air TV suicide in the US
Culture / 13 October 2016
13 October 2016
Culture / 6 October 2016
6 October 2016
A razor-sharp exposé of Scientology is a must-see says ALAN FRANK
Culture / 6 October 2016
6 October 2016
Culture / 30 September 2016
30 September 2016
Culture / 11 August 2016
11 August 2016
MARIA DUARTE believes much can be learned from a documentary that charts the fate of one victim of the infamous rendition practice
Culture / 11 August 2016
11 August 2016
Culture / 4 August 2016
4 August 2016
ALAN FRANK delights in Brian Cox’s tour de force performance in an intelligent story about a doomed Shakespearean actor
Culture / 4 August 2016
4 August 2016
Culture / 29 July 2016
29 July 2016
MARIA DUARTE sees Matt Damon give another top performance in a spy thriller referencing the era of Snowden and WikiLeaks
Culture / 29 July 2016
29 July 2016
Culture / 21 July 2016
21 July 2016
A new documentary on the disgraced war criminal lays bare his grim legacy of genocide and greed, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 21 July 2016
21 July 2016
Culture / 14 July 2016
14 July 2016
MARIA DUARTE recommends a moving tribute to the hardships faced by feminists in 1970s France
Culture / 14 July 2016
14 July 2016
Culture / 8 July 2016
8 July 2016
ALAN FRANK endures another example of successful TV series transformed into cinematic flop
Culture / 8 July 2016
8 July 2016
Culture / 30 June 2016
30 June 2016
MARIA DUARTE recommends an emotive account of what happens to a man after he loses his sight
Culture / 30 June 2016
30 June 2016
Culture / 23 June 2016
23 June 2016
ALAN FRANK enjoys a film on one of the more bizarre hook-ups ever between showbiz and politics
Culture / 23 June 2016
23 June 2016
Culture / 16 June 2016
16 June 2016
The Violators is a tragic, no-holds barred depiction of life among the underclass, says ALAN FRANK
Culture / 16 June 2016
16 June 2016
Culture / 9 June 2016
9 June 2016
Michael Moore ‘plunders’ the world on behalf of the great Satan and it’s fun, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 9 June 2016
9 June 2016
Culture / 8 June 2016
8 June 2016
RABBIL SIKDAR looks below the surface of superhero films and doesn’t like what he sees
Culture / 2 June 2016
2 June 2016
A new documentary shows Ken Loach’s left-wing commitment is as strong as ever, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 2 June 2016
2 June 2016
Culture / 1 June 2016
1 June 2016
Dr Rebecca Gordon-Nesbitt explores how, from the early days of monumental change in Cuba, cultural participation for all has been a top priority
Culture / 27 May 2016
27 May 2016
James Bobin’s version of Alice Through the Looking Glass bears no resemblance to the original, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 27 May 2016
27 May 2016
Culture / 23 May 2016
23 May 2016
RITA DI SANTO sees the British director carry off the top prize
Culture / 19 May 2016
19 May 2016
Culture / 12 May 2016
12 May 2016
Morning Star reviews of Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, Green Room, Angry Birds & Cabin Fever
Culture / 12 May 2016
12 May 2016
Maria DUARTE is mesmerised by a riveting adaptation of Le Carre
Culture / 28 April 2016
28 April 2016
Maria Duarte recommends an eye-opening film set in the nazi death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau
Culture / 21 April 2016
21 April 2016
This documentary puts a human face on the economic meltdown, says Maria Duarte
Culture / 21 April 2016
21 April 2016
Culture / 20 April 2016
20 April 2016
by Brian Precious
Culture / 14 April 2016
14 April 2016
The Eye in the Sky raises acute questions about the ethics of warfare, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 14 April 2016
14 April 2016
Culture / 7 April 2016
7 April 2016
Culture / 31 March 2016
31 March 2016
MARIA DUARTE recommends a great biopic of all-time Olympic underdog Eddie Edwards
Culture / 31 March 2016
31 March 2016
Culture / 28 March 2016
28 March 2016
JOHN GREEN recommends an outstanding exhibition of work by a radical image-maker
Culture / 25 March 2016
25 March 2016
Disney’s new animated feature Zootropolis is a treat, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 25 March 2016
25 March 2016
Culture / 17 March 2016
17 March 2016
ALAN FRANK is disappointed by the film adaptation of JG Ballard’s dystopian class-war novel
Culture / 17 March 2016
17 March 2016
Culture / 10 March 2016
10 March 2016
A psychological thriller conjures the paranoia and pressures of impending parenthood and then fails to deliver, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 10 March 2016
10 March 2016
Culture / 10 March 2016
10 March 2016
RITA DI SANTO reports from the Belgrade International Film Festival
Culture / 3 March 2016
3 March 2016
MARIA DUARTE recommends a film on the shackling of journalists who exposed George W Bush’s draft dodging before he became president
Culture / 3 March 2016
3 March 2016
Culture / 25 February 2016
25 February 2016
ALAN FRANK recommends Alvaro Longoria’s documentary, which provides an unusual focus on one of the world’s most secretive countries
Culture / 25 February 2016
25 February 2016
Culture / 19 February 2016
19 February 2016
ALAN FRANK is mesmerised by a documentary about the legendary singer Mavis Staples who catalysed a series of potent civil rights songs
Culture / 19 February 2016
19 February 2016
Culture / 11 February 2016
11 February 2016
MARIA DUARTE recommends a biopic on an inspirational charity worker
Culture / 11 February 2016
11 February 2016
Features / 4 February 2016
4 February 2016
PETER FROST wil not mourn the passing of the iconic all-terrain vehicle whose image will forever be tarnished by its association with political repression and warfare
Culture / 4 February 2016
4 February 2016
Trumbo is an outstanding film on a survivor of the Hollywood witch-hunts, says ALAN FRANK
Culture / 4 February 2016
4 February 2016
Culture / 29 January 2016
29 January 2016
MARIA DUARTE recommends a film on the child sex crimes perpetrated by Catholic priests
Culture / 29 January 2016
29 January 2016
Culture / 22 January 2016
22 January 2016
ALAN FRANK is hugely impressed by a stiletto-sharp satire on the 2008 financial meltdown
Culture / 22 January 2016
22 January 2016
Culture / 14 January 2016
14 January 2016
ALAN FRANK watches Leonardo DiCaprio suffer an overlong battle for survival in The Revenant
Culture / 14 January 2016
14 January 2016
Culture / 8 January 2016
8 January 2016
The Hateful Eight has the controversial director’s signature written all over it, says ALAN FRANK
Culture / 8 January 2016
8 January 2016
Culture / 23 December 2015
23 December 2015
Star critics and columnists run through what’s impressed them this year
Culture / 17 December 2015
17 December 2015
Culture / 11 December 2015
11 December 2015
Luc Jacquet’s film highlights the terrifying consequences of unchecked global warming, says ALAN FRANK
Culture / 11 December 2015
11 December 2015
Culture / 3 December 2015
3 December 2015
Agyness Deyn takes the acting honours in a classic, lyrical story of a young woman whose dreams are thwarted by her background, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 3 December 2015
3 December 2015
Culture / 27 November 2015
27 November 2015
Thanks to a Coen Brothers script and strong performances, Stephen Spielberg’s Bridge of Spies hits the mark with ALAN FRANK
Culture / 27 November 2015
27 November 2015
Culture / 24 November 2015
24 November 2015
JO STANLEY reports on the Leeds International Film Festival
Culture / 22 November 2015
22 November 2015
Star critics cherry-pick some of the best on offer in the weeks to come
Culture / 19 November 2015
19 November 2015
Culture / 12 November 2015
12 November 2015
Maria Duarte and Alan Frank have reviews of The Fear of 13, Tangerine, A Christmas Star, Steve Jobs, The Hallow and Fathers and Daughters
Culture / 12 November 2015
12 November 2015
ALAN FRANK sees Maggie Smith in the driving seat of a great film
Culture / 12 November 2015
12 November 2015
CHRIS BARTTER reports on a groundbreaking Havana-Glasgow film festival
Culture / 5 November 2015
5 November 2015
Maria Duarte and Alan Frank give their verdict on Brooklyn, Kill Your Friends, Burnt and Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse
Culture / 5 November 2015
5 November 2015
MARIA DUARTE recommends a documentary on the girl who survived a Taliban attack to become a global role model
Features / 4 November 2015
4 November 2015
NICK MATTHEWS recommends a tense new feature film by Florence Jaugey dealing with the abuse of social media in Nicaragua
Culture / 30 October 2015
30 October 2015
MARIA DUARTE recommends a bleak film exposing the realities of life in the mafia
Culture / 30 October 2015
30 October 2015
Culture / 22 October 2015
22 October 2015
ALAN FRANK enjoys a riveting documentary charting the extraordinary life and career of Russell Brand
Culture / 22 October 2015
22 October 2015
Culture / 15 October 2015
15 October 2015
Culture / 9 October 2015
9 October 2015
Star critics cherry-pick some of the best on offer in the weeks to come
Culture / 8 October 2015
8 October 2015
Culture / 8 October 2015
8 October 2015
ALAN FRANK reviews director Rodney S Ascher’s new horror flick
Culture / 1 October 2015
1 October 2015
Culture / 25 September 2015
25 September 2015
ALAN FRANK recommends a powerful study of youthful alienation
Culture / 24 September 2015
24 September 2015
Culture / 17 September 2015
17 September 2015
The Horrible Histories director serves up a great comic take on Shakespeare, says ALAN FRANK
Culture / 17 September 2015
17 September 2015
Culture / 15 September 2015
15 September 2015
RITA DI SANTO reports on an outstanding competition
Culture / 10 September 2015
10 September 2015
Reviews of The Visit, Legend, La Famille Belier, Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials and Irrational Man
Culture / 10 September 2015
10 September 2015
MARIA DUARTE recommends documentary How to Change the World on Greenpeace’s environmental activism
Culture / 7 September 2015
7 September 2015
It’s worth fighting off sleep for a right royal experience at a film all-nighter, writes James Walsh
Culture / 3 September 2015
3 September 2015
This week: Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, Ricki and the Flash, The Transporter Refuelled, American Ultra and Dope
Culture / 3 September 2015
3 September 2015
A new film shows why the hunt for drug traffickers is bound to fail, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 27 August 2015
27 August 2015
Culture / 20 August 2015
20 August 2015
MARIA DUARTE recommends a thriller shedding an uncomfortable light on child abduction
Culture / 13 August 2015
13 August 2015
Guy Ritchie fails, yet again, to give his cinematic touch any meaning, writes MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 6 August 2015
6 August 2015
This extraordinary, serious film is dominated by fine portrayals, compelling discussion of transgender sexual politics and impressive acting, writes ALAN FRANK
Culture / 6 August 2015
6 August 2015
Culture / 30 July 2015
30 July 2015
Culture / 23 July 2015
23 July 2015
ALAN FRANK enjoys a comic chiller about an oddball Glasgow barber and the hunt for a serial slasher
Culture / 23 July 2015
23 July 2015
Culture / 21 July 2015
21 July 2015
Derailed Sense East End Film Festival, London 4/5 - review by JODY PORTER
Culture / 9 July 2015
9 July 2015
Culture / 7 May 2015
7 May 2015
MARIA DUARTE recommends a tale of marginalised young black women seeking freedom
Culture / 12 February 2015
12 February 2015
MARIA DUARTE recommends a film on a unique project uniting Jews and Israeli Arabs
Features / 20 January 2015
20 January 2015
If American Sniper wins one Oscar, never mind the six its been nominated for, it will be an outrageous insult to the Iraqi people, writes JOHN WIGHT
Culture / 8 January 2015
8 January 2015
A new documentary on the National Gallery is simply an upmarket promo, says JEFF SAWTELL
Culture / 8 January 2015
8 January 2015
Britain / 6 January 2015
6 January 2015
Culture / 15 December 2014
15 December 2014
Rita di Santo reviews the year in film
Culture / 5 December 2014
5 December 2014
News that British Oscar-winning director Steve McQueen is to make a biopic of Paul Robeson causes JOHN WIGHT to reflect on a figure whose commitment to the plight of the common man — regardless of race, creed or nationality — has left an unsurpassable legacy
Culture / 4 December 2014
4 December 2014
Review of St Vincent, Get Santa, Men, Women & Children, Black Sea and Hello Carter
Culture / 2 December 2014
2 December 2014
John Smith’s film installation White Hole glimpses a Europe undivided between east and west, says MIKE QUILLE
Culture / 20 November 2014
20 November 2014
The moral that a well-lived and socially conscious life is more important than material wealth permeates Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s haunting Winter Sleep, says JEFF SAWTELL
Culture / 20 November 2014
20 November 2014
Mockingjay Part I, Get On Up, My Old Lady and The Homesman
Features / 16 November 2014
16 November 2014
Filmmaker ALEX MORRIS asks for your help to ensure the legacy of the miners is remembered with pride
Culture / 13 November 2014
13 November 2014
The tragic story of the man who broke the Enigma codes in WWII is beautifully brought to the screen, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 6 November 2014
6 November 2014
JEFF SAWTELL believes this highly critical parable of present-day Russia offers glimmers of hope
Britain / 3 November 2014
3 November 2014
News stories from around Britain
Britain / 14 September 2014
14 September 2014
Culture / 11 September 2014
11 September 2014
Pride, A Most Wanted Man, Darkness and In Order of Disappearance
Features / 10 September 2014
10 September 2014
PETER FROST remembers one of The Sun’s most despicable headlines and how it was taken up as rallying call for working-class unity
Culture / 9 September 2014
9 September 2014
RITA DI SANTO reports on a vintage Venice Film Festival
Culture / 8 September 2014
8 September 2014
Writer STEPHEN BERESFORD and director MATTHEW WARCHUS give David Sharkey an insight into a film which celebrates the support given by lesbian and gay people to the miners during the strike of 1984-85
Culture / 5 September 2014
5 September 2014
LEN PHELAN reports on a film festival aiming to challenge preconceptions of the Arab world
Culture / 28 August 2014
28 August 2014
JEFF SAWTELL recommends a documentary on the fate of internet ‘pirate’ Aaron Swartz
Features / 26 August 2014
26 August 2014
PETER FROST looks back on the career of the director who brought Steve Biko and Gandhi to cinema screens
Culture / 21 August 2014
21 August 2014
JEFF SAWTELL likes a film which takes an asinine ex-education secretary to task
Culture / 7 August 2014
7 August 2014
When fact relies on fiction, lessons of history can be lessened, believes MICHAL BONCZA
Culture / 31 July 2014
31 July 2014
MARIA DUARTE is transfixed by a romantic fantasy filmed with rare invention and panache
Culture / 31 July 2014
31 July 2014
with Maria Duarte
Culture / 7 July 2014
7 July 2014
Diego Quemada-Diez spent six years researching The Golden Dream, his film about Guatemalan migrants. Now he tells JOE GILL how he went about making it
Culture / 3 July 2014
3 July 2014
JEFF SAWTELL enjoys an update of the French playwright’s satire on a degenerate ruling class
Culture / 2 July 2014
2 July 2014
Culture / 2 July 2014
2 July 2014
Two films at the 36th Moscow International Film Festival give intriguing insights into Russian life, says RITA DI SANTO
Culture / 26 June 2014
26 June 2014
Diego Quemada-Diez’s film exemplifies the harsh experience of young Guatemalans as they they migrate in pursuit of the ‘American dream,’ says JEFF SAWTELL
Culture / 19 June 2014
19 June 2014
The love story of a couple doomed by cancer is told unsentimentally and honestly in The Fault In Our Stars, says MARIA DUARTE — but take tissues
Culture / 18 June 2014
18 June 2014
LEN PHELAN looks forward to a season of films by the late John McGrath, the highly influential socialist writer and producer of TV, films and theatre
Culture / 17 June 2014
17 June 2014
Culture / 12 June 2014
12 June 2014
Atom Egoyan’s film reveals the ongoing Hollywood paranoia about ‘the other’, says JEFF SAWTELL
Culture / 5 June 2014
5 June 2014
JEFF SAWTELL on another example of how the police get away with the murder of black men
Culture / 3 June 2014
3 June 2014
IAN SINCLAIR previews some of the hard-edged entries to the Yorkshire city’s annual Doc/Fest, which begins this weekend
Culture / 29 May 2014
29 May 2014
JEFF SAWTELL wonders whether Ken Loach’s latest stirring epic on Irish history might just be an act of leftist redemption
Britain / 27 May 2014
27 May 2014
Culture / 22 May 2014
22 May 2014
JEFF SAWTELL reads a note of resistance in X-Men
Britain / 16 May 2014
16 May 2014
Biopic of painter Turner wins Palme d'Or at Cannes; Man found dead in Welsh house where mother and child died 10 months ago; Plaid Cymru leader makes last-minute EU election plea; Ex-Ofsted contractor abandons its six academies
Culture / 8 May 2014
8 May 2014
MARIA DUARTE enjoys a distinctly oddball comedy about a music biz outsider
Culture / 1 May 2014
1 May 2014
Culture / 24 April 2014
24 April 2014
JEFF SAWTELL is moved by an honest Bosnian film about the economic degradation ushered in by ‘liberating’ capitalism
Culture / 18 April 2014
18 April 2014
Spider-Man returns to take on abandonment issues in a gripping sequel, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 14 April 2014
14 April 2014
The anti-cuts film Big Society The Musical, set in Liverpool, is about to get its premiere. Its director LYNNE HARWOOD explains why and how it was made
Culture / 3 April 2014
3 April 2014
A Kafkaesque-style thriller which draws heavily on Terry Gilliam's Brazil
Culture / 3 April 2014
3 April 2014
Leaving his camera running to film his niece and nephew, Irish critic and filmmaker Mark Cousins begins a journey throughout the world of cinema.
Culture / 3 April 2014
3 April 2014
Another tween book is given the big screen treatment in Hollywood's continuing search for another Twilight-style franchise box office hit.
Culture / 3 April 2014
3 April 2014
One of the most promising Canadian filmmakers Xavier Dolan returns with a drama of grief and loss.
Culture / 3 April 2014
3 April 2014
Brazilian director Carlos Saldanha reunites with his beloved rare birds Blu and Jewel in Rio 2.
Culture / 3 April 2014
3 April 2014
The controversial and growing issue of honour killings forms the basis for this totally gripping urban thriller set in west London
Culture / 3 April 2014
3 April 2014
A new version of the Noah story takes some not unwelcome liberties with the original, says MARIA DUARTE
Culture / 27 March 2014
27 March 2014
A British drama about loss, grief and misguided good intentions.
Culture / 27 March 2014
27 March 2014
What will happen to our lives if we decide to get rid of all our "stuff"?
Culture / 27 March 2014
27 March 2014
A complex and intense family melodrama set in the suburbs of Paris
Culture / 27 March 2014
27 March 2014
A dazzling documentary on backing singers
Culture / 27 March 2014
27 March 2014
The latest Captain America film is a skilful propaganda exercise in selling a benign capitalist world view to multiplex audiences, says JEFF SAWTELL
Culture / 24 March 2014
24 March 2014
Essence of Chile's student uprising in the frame
Culture / 24 March 2014
24 March 2014
LEN PHELAN reports on a new film venture showcasing progressive cinema at this year's Tolpuddle Martyrs Festival
Culture / 20 March 2014
20 March 2014
Four Suicides And A Valentine?
Culture / 20 March 2014
20 March 2014
The prologue to this homegrown prison drama promises much only to be let down as it runs through the cliches like a television soap opera
Culture / 20 March 2014
20 March 2014
Apart from being tiresome, Labor Day is possibly the most saccharine sweet slice of American pie I've had to suffer in some time.
Culture / 20 March 2014
20 March 2014
This impressive debut by Fabio Grassadonia and Antonio Piazza stars Palestinian actor Saleh Bakri as a mafia hit man
Culture / 20 March 2014
20 March 2014
Kevin Hart finally comes into his own as the loudmouthed Bernie who, though mildly annoying, is for once likeable.
Culture / 20 March 2014
20 March 2014
A new documentary paints a chilling portrait of the ex-US secretary of state, says JEFF SAWTELL
Culture / 13 March 2014
13 March 2014
After Love Like Poison, French film-maker Katell Quillevere returns with another story of love, life and death.
Culture / 13 March 2014
13 March 2014
Based loosely on Michel Faber's novel, Under The Skin tells the story of a predatory alien
Culture / 13 March 2014
13 March 2014
This documentary tells a previously untold story of apartheid's fall and a mysterious French businessman
Culture / 13 March 2014
13 March 2014
RITA DI SANTO recommends a tale set in a country which was bombed to near extinction by the US
Culture / 10 March 2014
10 March 2014
Feeble echo of an earth-shattering Clash
Culture / 7 March 2014
7 March 2014
Recently released on DVD, The Miners' Hymns is a powerful and moving tribute to the communities who created a wealth they did not share in, says MIKE QUILLE
Culture / 6 March 2014
6 March 2014
Arguably Rossellini's masterpiece, Rome Open City is a poignant reflection upon the atrocity of the fascist regime in Italy during WWII.
Culture / 6 March 2014
6 March 2014
This sequel to the bloodthirsty 300 is another bombardment to the senses as a band of strapping, half-naked men leave blood and carnage in their wake.
Culture / 6 March 2014
6 March 2014
Wes Anderson is on sublime form in this beautifully surreal and visually exquisite comedy drama.
Culture / 6 March 2014
6 March 2014
MARIA DUARTE recommends a hard-hitting documentary on rape in the US armed forces
Culture / 27 February 2014
27 February 2014
Comedian Kevin Hart's fast-talking, snappy comebacks and frenetic energy aren't enough to rescue this buddy-cop film by numbers.
Culture / 27 February 2014
27 February 2014
Set in World War II this is a rather strange and sanitised version of life in nazi Germany.
Culture / 27 February 2014
27 February 2014
At 61 Liam Neeson's action hero credentials soar to new heights in this utterly riveting and entertaining suspense thriller
Culture / 27 February 2014
27 February 2014
Inspired by Clint Eastwood's Western Unforgiven, Lee Sang-il's clever and gripping remake is set in Japan.
Culture / 27 February 2014
27 February 2014
We Are What We Are is a disturbing reminder of the roots of US fundamentalism, says JEFF SAWTELL
Culture / 25 February 2014
25 February 2014
Although exquisitely shot, A New York Winter's Tale seems a complete waste of its stellar cast
Culture / 25 February 2014
25 February 2014
Only the French can make a pornographic thriller erotic, stylish and utterly absorbing.
Culture / 20 February 2014
20 February 2014
Jim Jarmusch's Only Lovers Left Alive refreshes one of the most worn-out genres in cinema
Culture / 20 February 2014
20 February 2014
The heroes of Stalingrad deserve better, especially among audiences who have no knowledge of the 30 million Soviets who perished to save democracy
Culture / 20 February 2014
20 February 2014
An intimate and moving portrait of three generations in exile
Culture / 20 February 2014
20 February 2014
Lars Von Trier's Nymphomaniac is an antidote to plastic pornography, says JEFF SAWTELL
Culture / 19 February 2014
19 February 2014
RITA DI SANTO reports on a bumper crop of screenings at the annual film festival in the German capital
Culture / 6 February 2014
6 February 2014
A fascinating film which shines a whole new light on Dickens
Culture / 6 February 2014
6 February 2014
As a love story of intense emotional honesty, it's a film demanding concentration
Culture / 6 February 2014
6 February 2014
The way the US wages war has changed since Paul Verhoeven's brilliantly original Robocop
Culture / 6 February 2014
6 February 2014
War worse than a waste of time
Culture / 6 February 2014
6 February 2014
MARIA DUARTE recommends the story of an Aids sufferer's fight for treatment
Culture / 30 January 2014
30 January 2014
A male version of Bridget Jones meets Sex in the City
Culture / 30 January 2014
30 January 2014
Journal De France revisits the 40 years' working life of Raymond Depardon
Culture / 30 January 2014
30 January 2014
A documentary on the rise and fall of the cyclist Lance Armstrong
Culture / 30 January 2014
30 January 2014
Cynical takes on lower-depth woe
Culture / 30 January 2014
30 January 2014
JEFF SAWTELL takes issue with yet another US propaganda vehicle
Culture / 23 January 2014
23 January 2014
Sylvester Stallone and Robert De Niro deliver knockout performances
Culture / 23 January 2014
23 January 2014
Jeff Sawtell recommends a remarkable documentary
Culture / 23 January 2014
23 January 2014
An adaptation of Tracy Letts's Pulitzer Prize-winning play
Culture / 23 January 2014
23 January 2014
New recruit beefcakes up the Ryan franchise
Culture / 23 January 2014
23 January 2014
RITA DI SANTO recommends a hard-luck story set in the '60s US folk scene
Culture / 17 January 2014
17 January 2014
Director Sebastian Silva's road-trip story is a real eye-opener on modern Chilean society
Culture / 17 January 2014
17 January 2014
An inventor, two magicians and a Dutch master are at the heart of this fascinating documentary
World / 17 January 2014
17 January 2014
Scorsese's latest paints a convincing picture of neoliberal economics in crisis, says JEFF SAWTELL
Culture / 9 January 2014
9 January 2014
Vaughn on autopilot doing what he does best, playing loveable earnest losers who mean well