Women Who Kill Women Who Kill is a great example of what good, entertaining cinema ought to...
Kim Varod 16th October 2016
Sam Gray 16th October 2016
Sam Gray 16th October 2016
London Town Britain has a problem with nostalgia, or rather, British films can’t stop...
Sam Gray 16th October 2016
Kim Varod 16th October 2016
The Innocents The Innocents is a film written by Sabrina B Karine, Pascal Bonitzer, Anne...
Kim Varod 16th October 2016
Lion The most impressive thing about Lion isn’t its actors – Dev Patel and Nicole...
Sam Gray 16th October 2016
Kim Varod 16th October 2016
Creepy Japanese horror director, Kiyoshi Kurosawa returns with a tense and dark atmospheric...
Lewis Tighe 16th October 2016
Catherine Sedgwick 16th October 2016
Catherine Sedgwick 16th October 2016
Stuart Boyland 16th October 2016
Moderation From Athens-based director Anja Kirschner comes Moderation, a bold and surreal...
Jo Rogers 16th October 2016
Oliver Johnston 16th October 2016
Isabelle Milton 16th October 2016
Lovesong So Yong Kim’s Lovesong is a winsome, moving ode to love. About an ambiguous...
Catherine Sedgwick 16th October 2016
Raw Julia Ducournau’s Raw, an interesting take on cannibalism horror, might be less about...
Catherine Sedgwick 16th October 2016
Kim Varod 16th October 2016
Catherine Sedgwick 16th October 2016
Safari The first thing that comes to mind about Ulrich Seidl’s documentary Safari is...
Catherine Sedgwick 16th October 2016
Callback The list of actors for whom English is a second language and yet who can...
Oliver Johnston 16th October 2016
The Pass Directed by Ben A Williams and adapted from the play by John Donnelly, The Pass...
Catherine Sedgwick 16th October 2016
Porto “It doesn’t feel like a matter of choice”, ponder Jake and Mati...
Catherine Sedgwick 16th October 2016
Don’t Think Twice Anyone who has lived in New York City will recognise the characters...
Catherine Sedgwick 16th October 2016
Oliver Johnston 16th October 2016
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