Film

Showing results 61-80 of 478

The filmmaker’s latest documentary, Swimming Out till the Sea Turns Blue, is an object study of the generations affected by industrialization

BY Anthony Hawley |

Luca Guadagnino’s new HBO series treats identity like an Instagram filter

BY Evan Moffitt |

How Hannah Quinlan and Rosie Hastings, Ed Webb-Ingall and Ayo Akingbade approach the closure of public space

BY Ryan Kearney |

The gothic tales of notorious racist H.P. Lovecraft provide source material for HBO’s new show about ‘the hauntedness of Black life’

BY Ian Bourland |

The first blockbuster to return to theatres demonstrates Hollywood’s eagerness to ‘exploit bodily presence for profit’ during the pandemic

 

BY John Menick |

Primer (2004) asks what happens when history is always hanging in the balance

BY Lucy Ives |

The artist’s exhibition at Galerie Imane Farès, Paris, shows the multiple faces of resistance

BY Oriane Durand |

Amidst cycles of protest, Zoé Samudzi considers Mati Diop’s film in which young men ‘return’ to the shores of Dakar from their fatal attempt to emigrate overseas

BY Zoé Samudzi |

Coel's show ‘I May Destroy You’ daringly takes on the intricacies of sexual violence

BY Skye Arundhati Thomas |

‘First Cow’, the director’s seventh feature film, which began streaming 10 July, offers a humanistic alternative to the grand myths of Manifest Destiny

BY Tausif Noor |

Mark Cousins’s ‘Women Make Film’ celebrates 130 years of cinema by 183 female directors 

BY Jennifer Higgie |

In the director’s sweeping new Vietnam War film, it is never clear ‘who is the colonizer and who is the colonized’ 

BY Ian Bourland |

The weightlessness of the iconic film helps alleviate the oppressive pull of reality

BY Chloe Aridjis |

From his parodies of celebrity culture to his depiction of gender identities, there is still a lot to unpack on the centenary of the film director’s birth

BY Jamie Mackay |

Can Reiner Holzemer’s documentary finally lift the lid on the famously private designer? 

BY Hettie Judah |

Steven Zultanski on the Chicago-based cult video artist

BY Steven Zultanski |

The artist’s exhibition at Centre d’art contemporain Passerelle, Brest, blends gender, race and class politics with science fiction

BY Wilson Tarbox |

The Comedy Central series injects a dose of mania and sloth into the ‘multicultural sitcom’

BY Ken Chen |

The most urgent works at this year’s 70th Berlinale Film Festival are about coming to terms with culture’s inherited mythologies

BY Anthony Hawley |

Figures from art and film came together for the first Deutsche Bank Frieze Los Angeles Film Award

In Collaboration with Deutsche Bank