Latest – Page 19
-
Reviews
‘Mosaic Portrait’: Karlovy Vary Review
A pregnant Chinese schoolgirl finds herself under intense scrutiny
-
Reviews
'Trijya' (Radius): Shanghai Review
An intriguing debut from India’s Akshay Indikar focuses on a migrant’s sense of self ‘Trijya’
-
Reviews
‘Samurai Marathon’: Edinburgh Review
The team behind ‘13 Assassins’ unites with Bernard Rose for an epic sword-slasher
-
Reviews
'Alice': Edinburgh Review
Directed by an Australian first-timer, this Paris-set SXSW winner impresses on its international debut
-
Reviews
'The Furies': Edinburgh Review
Retro slasher movie from Australia should make some commercial splatter
-
Reviews
'About Love': Sheffield Review
This absorbing family portrait from a young Bombay director took the New Talent award at Sheffield
-
Reviews
'Hearts And Bones': Sydney Review
A photographer and a refugee grapple with the trauma of a shared war
-
Reviews
'Bellbird': Sydney Review
A tender, amusing reflection on life and loss in a small New Zealand dairy farm
-
Reviews
'The Wonderland': Annecy Review
Keiichi Hara follows up ‘Miss Hokusai’ with a complex coming-of-age adventure story
-
Reviews
'Palm Beach': Sydney Review
A group of life-long friends reunite for a weekend of stories and secrets
-
Reviews
'Dwelling in the Fuchun Mountains': Cannes Review
Critics Week closes with the first of a planned trilogy from debut director Gu Xiaogang
-
Reviews
'Parasite': Cannes Review
A twist-laden black comedy in ‘home invasion’ mode from Bong Joon Ho
-
Reviews
'Nina Wu': Cannes Review
A #Metoo moment from Taiwan’s Midi Zi, with actoress/writer Wu Ke-Xi drawing heavily on personal experiences
-
Reviews
'To Live To Sing': Cannes Review
Johnny Ma’s colourful film is centred around a Chengdu Opera troupe on the verge of collapse
-
Reviews
'Family Romance LLC': Cannes Review
’Constructed reality’ feature from Werner Herzog follows a Japanese company which sells fake friends and family members
-
Reviews
'First Love': Cannes Review
This riotously entertaining bloodbath from Takashi Miike might be his most commercial film in a while