JT Mollner’s low-budget, twisty B-movie subversion about a one night stand gone wrong is undeniably inventive, with a tour de-force performance from Willa Fitzgerald, but the film’s constant ...
Alexandre de La Patellière and Matthieu Delaporte’s rollicking, expensive French blockbuster is a fittingly bold take on Dumas’s 1,300 page revenge-tale.
And in the late Kevin Conroy, you have the definitive screen Batman – at least when it comes to the voice. Winner of the Un Certain Regard prize at this year’s Cannes, director Guan Hu’s Black Dog was ...
For the first time, FrightFest is opening and closing with films by female directors. And there’s plenty in between to ...
This year’s BFI London Film Festival Official Competition selection includes films from across the world including the UK, Zambia, Ireland, Italy and Australia.
Rupert Sanders’ adaptation of the 1994 cult hit is a lifeless resurrection thriller that fails to whip up any sense of passion between its two leads, Bill Skarsgard and FKA Twigs.
Cuckoo metaphors and loopy plot lines are pushed to the limit in this wildly unsettling conspiratorial horror set in a Bavarian alpine resort.
A theatre director prepares a fantastical show with convicts at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in this heartening drama led by Colman Domingo.
Givanni and Adjoa Andoh discuss history and drama, exploring the way films and television series can help to inform and impact people’s understanding of the past.
The BFI National Archive’s major new project – the restoration of a series of films starring Eille Norwood, Conan-Doyle’s favourite screen Sherlock – will be presented with a live score at Alexandra ...
From kinetic action to melancholy romance: here are the best places to seek out the graceful stardom of the incomparable Maggie Cheung.
To inaugurate a new BFB series in which critics excavate the minds of fellow critics, film journalist Leila Latif meets Ellen E. Jones, the author of Screen Deep: How Film and TV Can Solve Racism and ...