In our Autumn 1983 issue, we heard from novelist and screenwriter Ian McEwan on The Ploughman’s Lunch, his and Eyre’s exploration of the 'fake present'.
Mini-Hollywood is a theme park in the Spanish desert based around the Wild West sets built for Sergio Leone’s Dollars trilogy. Fifty years on, it offers a window on to a storied period of Spanish film ...
Guy Maddin takes his far out irreverence to the masses with a slippery political satire that pits a group of inept world leaders against zombie bog bodies and a giant brain.
Indiana Jones and the Great Circle – out this month, we hunt for the franchise’s best video game moments, from point-and-click masterpieces to a guest appearance on Fortnite.
Jacques Demy’s ineffable coastal-town musical mixes sweetness and sting, dreams and life, as our reviewer Elizabeth Sussex wrote in the 1965 Monthly Film Bulletin.
As his wild new satire Rumours is unleashed into cinemas, we take a trip into the frantic, archaic, half-remembered dream worlds of the one and only Guy Maddin.
But the risk-taking exploits of the great silent comedian have also inspired Keanu Reeves and Brad Pitt in their respective stunting in John Wick (2014) and Bullet Train (2022). Tom Cruise is a fan ...
Filmmaker Chloe Abrahams tells us about her award-winning documentary The Taste of Mango, an intimate enquiry into distressing aspects of her own family history.
When making the classic film of Watership Down, the animators based their drawings on actual places in the English countryside. But have these locations been spared the bulldozers?
As Cannes Grand Prix winner All We Imagine as Light arrives in cinemas, we look back over the renaissance in Indian independent cinema of the last 15 years.
A funny and charming tale of one Irish son juggling four very different mothers, Darren Thornton’s film won the LFF 2024 Audience Award for Best Feature.
A 1970s disaster movie classic, a double dose of slow cinema, and a romance set amid the London drag scene. What are you watching this weekend?