LC

Lai Chin

In Cinemas Now

Now Streaming

Related Reviews/Features

Everybody Loves Jeanne review – thoroughly modern fable of grief, romantic confusion, and climate anxiety

Celine Deveaux's French-Portuguese debut can be too quirky for its own good, but a fantastically written lead character keeps it afloat

Talk to Me review – zeitgeisty horror is slightly derivative but gratuitously fun

The debut from YouTubers-turned-filmmakers the Philippou brothers makes for sharp, bloody viewing, even if it runs out of steam

Repertory Rundown: What to Watch in London This Week, From Little Women to Sergio Leone

From classics to cult favourites, our team highlight some of the best one-off screenings and re-releases showing this week in the capital

Iraq’s Invisible Beauty review – moving but scrappy look at a photographer and his flailing home country

As a tribute to pre-'80s Iraq, Sahim Omar Kalifa's doc is a touching affair, but it's hampered by dry exposition and terrible narration

Repertory Rundown: What to Watch in London This Week, From Coppola to Cross of Iron

From classics to cult favourites, our team highlight some of the best one-off screenings and re-releases showing this week in the capital

20 Best Films of 2023 (So Far)

With the year at the halfway point, our writers choose their favourite films, from daring documentaries to box office bombs

While We Watched review – electric account of what it means to be in the eye of a raging storm

Director Vinay Shukla's vital documentary hones in on NDTV news anchor Ravish Kumar as he faces pro-Modi nationalist hysteria

Repertory Rundown: What to Watch in London This Week, From Mistress America to The Man Who Wasn’t There

From classics to cult favourites, our team highlight some of the best one-off screenings and re-releases showing this week in the capital

Mother and Son review – an intimate family epic that feels beautifully real

Leonor Serraille's gorgeous new film, about an Ivorian family in France, balances a grounded tale with splashes of the surreal

Small, Slow But Steady review – boxing biopic is an uppercut above the rest

Shô Miyake's film about the world's first hearing-impaired professional woman boxer brilliantly sidesteps the standard beats

Profile photos provided by TheMovieDB.org