Patrick Wilson makes his directorial debut with this fifth entry, but it's impossible to recommend to anyone other than completists
Leonor Serraille's gorgeous new film, about an Ivorian family in France, balances a grounded tale with splashes of the surreal
Ulises de la Orden's three-hour documentary about the 1985 trial of the country's military junta is an incredible feat of filmmaking
To mark the release of Crimes of the Future, Steph Green sorts the body-obsessed auteur's vast filmography from worst to best...
David Earl and Chris Hayward write and star in this hilarious, poignant and very British tale of a man and his artificial best friend
Alia Bhatt shines in a true to life tale of such pure cinematic spectacle that even the film's sizeable flaws seem to fall away
As Kenneth Lonergan's egocentric epic nears its 10th anniversary, Steph Green looks back on the film's remarkable lead turn
A powerful lead performance and a righteous rage drive this moving film about the human cost of the USA's sadistic foreign policy
Bong Joon-ho's brilliant breakthrough - now re-released in UK cinemas - cleverly subverts the conventions of the serial killer film
With I'm Thinking of Ending Things now on Netflix, Ella Kemp looks back at the films that have come to define the writer-director's extraordinary body of work