What would you do if your child could listen in to your private conversations? Frédéric Hambalek’s dark but hilarious film about a teen with telepathic powers feels designed to make parents wince.
Romanian director Radu Jude's spiky social satire about a bailiff who faces a crisis of conscience when one of her evictees dies by suicide may be his most radical and despairing film yet.
A Turkish literary professor unravels when his mother dies in mysterious circumstances in Iranian director Alireza Khatami’s noirish nightmare.
Supernatural picnics, an underground boxing ring and a Christmas Party to decide the fate of England. What are you watching this weekend?
Hot Milk: Fiona Shaw is a spiky delight in this atmospheric but unsatisfying Deborah Levy adaptation
Debut director Rebecca Lenkiewicz has a clear affinity with the material, but the interiority of Levy’s novel about a fraught mother-daughter holiday (played here by Fiona Shaw and Emma Mackey), doesn ...
Explosions, lens flares and VFX galore... On his 60th birthday, explore Michael Bay's action-packed filmography to venture into an identifiable stylistic Bayhem.
One hundred years after The New Yorker published its first issue, we delve into the rich history of movies that have been inspired by its writing – from Meet Me in St. Louis to Adaptation.
The BFI Flare 2025 Programming team announce the line-up of one of the world’s most significant queer film events in the LGBTQIA+ calendar.
Kneecap, Rich Peppiatt’s comedy-drama about the rise of the titular Belfast hip-hop trio, won outstanding debut by a British writer, director or producer. The film, which had previously won seven ...
The MCU’s latest outing, starring Harrison Ford as the hulk and Anthony Mackie as Captain America, is built from the foundations of some of the least-liked Marvel film and TV-projects.
In the week of Valentine’s Day and the kickoff of the Berlin Film Festival, we go looking for the locations of the most romantic of all Berlin films: Wim Wenders’ soaring tale of angelic love and ...
By retelling the real-life story of activist Eunice Paiva (Fernanda Torres), whose husband was abducted by Brazil’s military dictatorship in 1971, director Walter Salles is speaking of and to the ...
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