Blu-ray: Funeral Parade of Roses

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: FUNERAL PARADE OF ROSES Courageous experimental cinema

A courageous piece from a pioneer of experimental cinema

There is a memorable scene in Toshio Matsumoto’s Funeral Parade of Roses (1969), in which a group of stoned hippies and cross-dressers force each other, one-by-one, to walk the length of a line of tape that runs along the floor. Those who await their turn are seen crouched below, their flailing arms beckoning the walker down from their imagined tightrope. When they fall, as they inevitably and willingly do, they are punished – with the forced removal of their clothes.

Four Kids and It review – a family friendly yarn that needs more magic

★★★ FOUR KIDS AND IT Jacqueline Wilson’s contemporary update is a so-so Blytonesque adventure

Jacqueline Wilson’s contemporary update is a so-so Blytonesque adventure

With over one hundred books to her name and several hugely popular TV spin-offs, including the Tracy Beaker adventures, Jacqueline Wilson takes a no-nonsense approach to children’s fiction that reflects the realities of jigsaw families, mental and divorce. In 2012, in something of a detour from the rest of her work, she wrote a sequel of sorts to E. Nesbit’s beloved magical children’s classic, Five Children and It.  

DVD: Children's Film Foundation Bumper Box Vol 2

More buried treasure from the CFF archive: a treat for young and old alike

The Children’s Film Foundation began life in 1950, its brief to provide wholesome home-grown entertainment for Saturday morning cinema audiences. Instead of westerns and cartoons, young UK filmgoers were treated to low budget short features, usually involving plucky youngsters foiling dastardly criminal plots. They were produced up until the late 1980s, the organisation living on today as the Children’s Media Foundation. The BFI’s second box set of CFF features is every bit as good as the first instalment, and sifting through the nine films included here emphasises the company’s strengths.

System Crasher review – a compelling portrait of childhood violence and pain

★★★★ SYSTEM CRASHER Compelling portrait of childhood violence and pain

Nora Fingscheid’s social realist drama about a troubled 9-year-old is as tough as it is tender

Benni, the central character in German writer-director Nora Fingscheidt's haunting new film, has a life of tragedy and violence. She’s the product of a dysfunctional family and an abusive childhood that has left her rage-ridden and incapable of controlling her anger. 

DVD/Blu-ray: Beat the Devil

★★★ BEAT THE DEVIL John Huston's indulgent curio returns, replete with starry cast

John Huston's indulgent curio returns, replete with starry cast

Humphrey Bogart. John Huston. Gina Lollobrigida. Peter Lorre. Truman Capote! What could possibly go wrong? There’s the screenplay for starters: Capote gets top billing, and I’d long understood that he and Huston together wrote 1953's Beat the Devil on the hoof, script pages being typed up only minutes before they were handed to the cast.

Military Wives review - the surprising true story of the women who rocked the charts

★★★★ MILITARY WIVES 'Full Monty' director Peter Cattaneo returns with another feel-good Britcom

'Full Monty' director Peter Cattaneo returns with another feel-good BritCom

There’s a lot of plucky British charm to Military Wives, from Peter Cattaneo, the director who won the nation's heart with his debut film The Full Monty over two decades ago.

Berlinale 2020: Never Rarely Sometimes Always review - raw and unflinching abortion drama hits home

Plus Abel Ferrara's Jungian nightmare and Decker's shrieking 'Shirley'

Back in 2017, writer-director Eliza Hittman won over audiences with her beautiful coming-of-age drama Beach Rats. Her latest film, Never Rarely Sometimes Always, is a more quietly devastating drama, shifting the focus away from sexual awakenings to a more politically charged arena.

Berlinale 2020: Berlin Alexanderplatz review - a contemporary twist on a classic

Alfred Döblin's novel becomes a tale for our times and Sally Potter's dementia drama

Burhan Qurbani isn’t the first director to bring Alfred Döblin’s seminal 1929 novelBerlin Alexanderplatz, to the screen. First, there was the Weimar Republic era adaptation that Döblin himself worked on. Fifty years later, Rainer Werner Fassbinder brought us his 15-hour television opus.

DVD/Blu-ray: Bait

Mark Jenkin's acclaimed first feature: tensions spark within a Cornish fishing village

Mark Jenkin’s black and white masterpiece about clashes between incomers and locals in a Cornish fishing village was made on a 1976 clockwork Bolex camera that doesn’t record sound – all that’s added later, including the actors’ voices – and hand-processed by him in an old rewind tank in his studio in Newlyn.