A superb Daniel Craig drinks and dopes his days away in Mexico and becomes besotted with a young man in Guadagnino’s poetic reinvention of Burroughs’ grimy, semi-autobiographical novel.
South Korean cinema saw an explosion of creativity in the 1950s and 60s, but the films weren’t as widely exported as those of the Japanese golden age. Begin your exploration with this handful of ...
A new animated documentary presents the life of musician Pharrell Williams in an enjoyable and surprising Lego package.
The winning films explore a fascinating breadth of themes and stories, with best film going to Adam Elliot’s Memoir of a Snail.
The idea that New Zealand films could attract global success was on the ascendant in the 80s and 90s, after the New Zealand Film Commission had been established and highly distinctive films such as ...
In our autumn 1987 issue Michal Leszczylowski, editor of The Sacrifice, remembers his last meeting with Andrei Tarkovsky.
The first sight of a major BFI restoration of films starring Eille Norwood as Sherlock Holmes premiered to London Film Festival audiences this week, in the suitably Victorian setting of Alexandra ...
Director Gints Zilbalodis’s wordless environmental fable finds comedy in animal behaviours as an unlikely gang of castaway creatures fights to survive a flood.
Milisuthando Bongela’s remarkable documentary examines the history of South African apartheid through the lens of her childhood in the Transkei, a segregated South African state reserved for Black ...