All articles by Wendy Ide – Page 24
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Reviews
‘Amparo’: Cannes Review
An intense and personal debut from Colombian filmmaker Simon Mesa Soto
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Reviews
‘Peaceful’: Cannes Review
Emmanuelle Bercot returns to Cannes with a tough cancer drama starring Catherine Deneuve and Benoit Magimel
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Reviews
‘Bloody Oranges’: Cannes Review
Jean-Christophe Meurisse pushes buttons with his provocative Cannes Midnight entry
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Reviews
‘Small Body’: Cannes Review
A young woman attempts to save the soul of her stillborn child in 1900s Italy
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Reviews
‘Hit The Road’: Cannes Review
Panah Panahi raises the roof with his Directors’ Fortnight triumph
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Reviews
‘Mothering Sunday’: Cannes Review
Odessa Young leads a strong British cast in Eva Husson’s adpatation of Graham Swift’s nove
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Reviews
‘House Arrest’: Cannes Review
Aleksey German Jr arrives at Cannes with the story of a University professor confined to campus
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Reviews
‘Where Is Anne Frank’: Cannes Review
Ari Folman sets his animation a year in the future in this ‘bold attempt to combine family entertainment and politics’
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Reviews
‘Magnetic Beats’: Cannes Review
1980s pirate radio lifts two brothers - and audiences - into a new world in this Directors’ Fortnight debut from Brittany
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Reviews
‘The Worst Person In The World’: Cannes Review
Joachim Trier throws caution to the wind in this Palme D’Or contender, the final part of his Oslo trilogy
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Reviews
‘Lingui: The Sacred Bonds’: Cannes Review
A single mother struggles to protect her pregnant daugter in Mahamat-Saleh Haroun’s Cannes Competition title
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Reviews
‘Robust’: Cannes Review
Critics Week opens with an enjoyable odd-couple drama starring Gerard Depardieu and Deborah Lukumuena
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Reviews
‘Between Two Worlds’: Cannes Review
Juliette Binoche stars in Directors’ Fortnight opener about an undercover writer who plans an expose on France’s employment crisis
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Features
Emmys spotlight: Steve McQueen on achieving global impact with the personal Black British stories of ‘Small Axe’
UK writer/director Steve McQueen tells Screen how his deeply personal Small Axe films – about the experience of West Indian immigrants in London – achieved unexpected global resonance
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Reviews
‘Even Mice Belong In Heaven’: Annecy Review
Charming stop-motion animation is a visual delight
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Reviews
‘Brighton 4th’: Tribeca Review
A Georgian former wrestling champion journeys to Brooklyn to visit his son in Levan Koguashvili’s study of community and masculinity
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Reviews
‘My Sunny Maad’: Annecy Review
A Czech woman builds a new life in Kabul with her Afghan husband
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Reviews
‘Lamya’s Poem’: Annecy Review
A young Syrian refugee connects with Rumi’s 800-year-old poetry in this lyrical animation
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Reviews
‘Snotty Boy’: Annecy Review
Visually distinctive dramatisation of the life of cult Austrian cartoonist Manfred Deix