The films of the French New Wave director turn Paris into a board game where mystery and conspiracy permeate the boulevards. How did his locations look today?
Tilda Swinton sings through an apocalypse, there’s a tale of murder and mushrooms in rural France, and we have two tales of terror on the tarmac. What are you watching this weekend?
The class of 1975 includes a Kubrick masterpiece, the first feature by a Black British director, and the Knights Who Say ‘Ni!’ ...
Joshua Oppenheimer’s debut fiction feature – following a series of intense political documentaries – is a daring but slow-paced end-of-the-world musical, buoyed by spirited lead performances from ...
Guiraudie takes Hitchcock’s deadpan sensibility to another level with a genre-fluid crime story about murder, desire and suspicious mushrooms, set in a small village in the Massif Central.
As a new exhibition offers a unique glimpse at the craft that goes into their hallucinatory stop-motion animations, we visit the Quay brothers at their studio.
The first feature from The Neurocultures Collective doesn’t just challenge neurodiverse stereotypes, it presents a manifesto for a new kind of cinematic language.
A 10-film primer on the Slovak contributions to the Czechoslovak New Wave.
Shot in cool black and white, Mexican director Alonso Ruizpalacios’s depiction of an intense New York restaurant handles the stories of undocumented workers with care.
With their shared fascination with ideas and forming new shapes, David Cronenberg and Howard Shore are one of cinema’s most adventurous director-composer partnerships. Here we explore their fertile ...
Gangs of London is a sprawling crime saga set in a world of brutal violence and shifting allegiances. As season 3 begins on Sky, we spoke to cast and crew on set.
New York photographer Joel Meyerowitz and artist Maggie Barrett take stock of their 30-year marriage, contemplating mortality, equality and how to move forward together, in this richly artful ...