The last film from Tibetan director Pema Tseden takes on a mystical quality as a Chinese television crew arrives in Tibet to report on a farmer who has taken a snow leopard captive for killing his ...
Elizabeth Sankey’s candid personal reflection on post-partum psychosis is at its strongest when it moves away from the fiction of witchcraft in cinema, and to the real-life experiences of the women ...
In an era preoccupied with misinformation, a new book tells the story of how the moving image has been wielded to shape opinion and push British political interests. Here, author Scott Anthony looks ...
He was the kid trained by Bruce Lee in Enter the Dragon, but he went on to become one of Hong Kong’s most acclaimed action choreographers. Stephen Tung Wai looks back over 50 years of kung fu and ...
Cold War intrigue to a jazz beat, a box of serials, and our new favourite Christmas film. What are you watching this weekend?
Released in 2004, Hideo Kojima's covert ops thriller pulled from James Bond, Apocalypse Now and Escape From New York in its mission to elevate stealth action gaming.
The Citadel, the gravity gun, the headcrab. Valve Corporation’s 2004 first-person shooter was a masterclass of game design that has endured, inspiring waves of video games, film and TV since.
Three Costa Rican women are incarnated into a 71-year-old woman in Antonella Sudasassi’s graceful exploration of ageing and sexual desire.
A newly arranged marriage. An oddball couple shoved together in a small Mumbai shack with paper-thin walls. They are awkward and alone-together. Unpredictable Uma does her best to cope with the heat, ...
Get your hands on exclusive limited-edition Starve Acre figurines of Matt Smith and Morfydd Clark, as well as a set of signed novels from Andrew Michael Hurley. To celebrate the availability of Starve ...
At the BFI we champion new talent and unfamiliar stories from unfamiliar voices. We’re passionate about projects that reach new audiences, and we back the international promotion of the UK industry.
With her new film Bird, Andrea Arnold gets closer to the spirit of magical realist literature than most movies have done, says Juana Albina, one of the critics on this year’s LFF Critics Mentorship ...