In his fourth feature film, writer-director Louis Garrel explores with wit and tenderness the risk and worth of second chances
A mountain trek intertwines with a road-building project, granting incisive, if underpowered, insight into a much underseen world
Now back in cinemas in 4K, the director's first film, based on Jeffrey Eugenides' novel, remains brilliantly elusive and challenging
This dreamlike doc might lack punch, but it's an effective study of the self-inflicted hopelessness of the 21st century world
The debut from YouTubers-turned-filmmakers the Philippou brothers makes for sharp, bloody viewing, even if it runs out of steam
From classics to cult favourites, our team highlight some of the best one-off screenings and re-releases showing this week in the capital
Christopher Nolan's epic take on the "Father of the Atomic Bomb" is a compulsive culmination of the director's career so far
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
Packed with enough jokes and visual inventiveness to get around the corporate feel, this follow-up to Little Women is a vibrant treat
Mark Cousins takes a stab at the most famous director in history... by bringing him back from the dead to explain his own work