As Nezouh enters cinemas, French cinematographer Hélène Louvart shares her behind-the-scenes insights from lining up shots with the likes of Wim Wenders, Agnès Varda and Alice Rohrwacher.
Ryan Gosling plays a stuntman, Kristen Stewart a thirsty bodybuilder, and a neglected Italian tearjerker emerges on Blu-ray.
Anne Hathaway stars as a gallery owner who falls for a young Harry Styles-esque pop-star in a sweet rom-com that’s light on laughs but big on romantic clichés.
A Lebanese woman living in 1980s London embarks on a visionary journey through female protest and defiance in the newly restored classic Leila and the Wolves. Director Heiny Srour remembers its ...
From Agnès Varda to Mati Diop: how these first fiction features announced the arrival of formidable talents. If the invention of film can be traced back to a pair of Frenchmen, and the first ...
The groundbreaking Italian neorealist films of the 1940s were centred around ordinary people. No movie stars required. Yet it was a movie star that came to embody their earthy grit: the force of ...
The new fund allocates £911,000 to eight UK project development labs to support emerging filmmakers with genre projects.
There’s a bounty of 18 new releases at the cinema this week, while at home we enter the dreams of one of the world’s greatest directors.
As he prepared to shoot the American TV film Glory! Glory! for HBO, his last feature, maverick British director Lindsay Anderson took time out to look back over a distinguished career.
Boy’s muddled with your Ghouls? Here's an explainer of the world of Fallout, the post-apocalyptic TV sensation, spun off from Bethesda Game Studios’ video games.
In our Winter 1948/49 issue, Michael Balcon, the legendary British producer and head of Ealing Studios, recalled the manifold challenges faced by the crew of the Robert Falcon Scott biopic.
We’re also launching a call out for a People’s Advisory Panel, from a variety of backgrounds from across the UK and Ireland, to help influence the new collection.