Jared Hess’ live-action take on the popular sandbox game builds worlds, steals plots and brings broad laughs.
Irish tragicomedy, a story of sex and publishing, and a Hitchcock classic on TV. What are you watching this weekend?
A celebration of 25 years of In the Mood for Love, with new interviews from Wong Kar Wai, Maggie Cheung, William Chang, Christopher Doyle and more, and a fresh reflection on the film by Jessica Kiang ...
Director Darren Thornton’s charming remake of Gianni Di Gregorio’s Italian comedy Mid-August Lunch (2008) brings the story to Ireland, where the people-pleasing debut novelist Edward is left to ...
Michel Hazanavicius’s adaptation of Jean-Claude Grumberg’s 2019 Holocaust novel has elegant animation to match its fairytale tone, but ultimately feels like two stories inelegantly stuck together.
With two new John Lennon documentaries out this spring, and news filtering out about Sam Mendes’ upcoming Beatles biopics, we assess the best of the Fab Four on film.
On the eve of our 2002 Greatest Films of All Time poll, this feature argued the merits of Muriel’s Wedding, whose funniness and femininity balance a darker underside.
Audiences attending screenings and events at BFI Southbank increased by 6%, with 50% of these audiences new to BFI Flare.
Irish director Darren Thornton tells us about his new adaptation of the Italian comedy Mid-August Lunch, which sees a novelist grappling with his ageing mother and three other eccentric elderly mums.
The first feature from The Neurocultures Collective doesn’t just challenge neurodiverse stereotypes, it presents a manifesto for a new kind of cinematic language.
Tilda Swinton sings through an apocalypse, there’s a tale of murder and mushrooms in rural France, and we have two tales of terror on the tarmac. What are you watching this weekend?
Joshua Oppenheimer’s debut fiction feature – following a series of intense political documentaries – is a daring but slow-paced end-of-the-world musical, buoyed by spirited lead performances from ...