All articles by Lee Marshall – Page 15
-
Reviews
'Human Flow': Venice Review
Chinese artist Ai Weiwei casts his eye on the world’s refugee crisis, touring more than 40 refugee camps.
-
-
-
Reviews
'The Desert Bride': Cannes Review
A long-distance bus ride turns into an adventure for Pauline Garcia’s Argentinian maid
-
Reviews
'A Gentle Creature': Cannes Review
Dir/scr Sergei Loznitsa. Fr/Ger/Lith/Neth, 2017. 143mins.Ukrainian feature and documentary maker Sergei Loznitsa’s first dramatic film since In The Fog (2012), A Gentle Creature is a grim state-of-the-nation fable, a bitter mix of tragedy, farce and road movie soaked in the bleak sardonic spirit of Gogol and ...
-
Reviews
'The Dragon's Defense': Cannes Review
Chess is life for a trio of 50-something friends in Bogota
-
Reviews
'After The War': Cannes Review
A former terrorist hides out in France with is teenage daugher in Annarita Zambrano’s debut
-
Reviews
'Until The Birds Return': Cannes Review
Three interconnected stories tell of life in modern-day Algeria in Karim Moussaoui’s feature debut
-
Reviews
'Happy End': Review
Two-time Palme D’Or winner Michael Haneke returns with a close-quarters family drama
-
Reviews
'How to Talk to Girls at Parties': Cannes Review
Elle Fanning and Nicole Kidman star in long-gestating punk meets aliens drama
-
Reviews
'The Venerable W': Cannes Review
A Buddhist monk who incites riots against Burma’s Muslim minority completes Barbet Schroeder’s ‘Axis of Evil’ trilogy
-
Reviews
'The Square': Cannes Review
A museum director’s life goes downhill in the wake of a PR stunt designed to promote a piece of performance art called The Square.
-
Reviews
'Blade Of The Immortal': Cannes Review
Takashi Miike’s adaptation of a beloved manga classic is both tasteful and bloody
-
Reviews
'Joaquim': Berlin Review
Julio Machado plays a revolutionary martyr in colonial, gold-rush Brazil in Marcelo Gomes’ sweaty, dusty film
-
Reviews
'Colo': Berlin Review
The Portugese financial crisis comes home to roost in Teresa Villaverde’s mannered but original film
-
Reviews
'Beuys': Berlin Review
Three years in the making, Andres Veiel’s documentary about German artist Joseph Beuys takes its stylistic cues from its restlessly creative subject
-
Reviews
'Bright Nights': Berlin Review
A father and son road trip through northern Norway, starring Georg Friedrich
-
Reviews
'The Young Karl Marx': Berlin Review
Raul Peck takes viewers on a romp through the writing of the Communist Manifesto, with August Diehl starring as the titular theorist
-
Reviews
'Inflame': Berlin Review
A psychological thriller set in contemporary Istanbul sees a TV editor grapple with her mysterious past
-
Reviews
Félicité: Berlin Review
Set in Kinshasa, Alain Gomis’ fourth feature is a music-infused reverie