Filmmaker Darius Marder: 'Deafness is a culture. That's not being PC'

Q&A: FILMMAKER DARIUS MARDER Taking 'Sound of Metal' from concept to award nominations

Writer and director on Sound of Metal's long journey from concept to award nominations

Sound of Metal has been a long time coming. Director and writer Darius Marder faced years of delays ranging from casting changes to the whole world shutting down. Was it worth the wait? Well, six Academy Award nominations including Best Film certainly suggest it was.

My Father and Me, BBC Two review - Nick Broomfield's moving voyage around his family

★★★★★ MY FATHER AND ME, BBC TWO Nick Broomfield's voyage around his family

Acclaimed documentarist's most personal film acutely catches social history

Nick Broomfield made his first film 50 years ago, and his career over those five decades (and some three dozen works) has been as distinctive, and distinguished as that of any British documentary maker.

Verdict review - social realism and court procedural combine in powerful Manila drama

★★★★ VERDICT Domestic abuse and legal turmoil in Venice prize-winning debut

Domestic abuse and legal turmoil in Raymund Ribay Gutierrez’s Venice prize-winning debut

There’s something of an anomaly in Filipino director Raymund Ribay Gutierrez’s debut feature between its fast-moving dramatic opening, defined by an agile hand-held camera, and the much slower, more static scenes that follow.

One Night in Miami review - black history come alive

★★★ ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI Regina King's directorial debut about a momentous meeting

Regina King's directorial debut about a momentous meeting

In 1964, Cassius Clay, NFL superstar Jim Nathaniel Brown, soul legend Sam Cooke and political firebrand Malcolm X gathered for one night in a dingy room at the Hampton Motel. It was a meeting that became a symbol of hope for black Americans. A photo, taken by Malcolm X would make the moment iconic, marking a shift away from the horrors of Jim Crow America to the passing of the Civil Rights Act. 

Best of 2020: Film

BEST OF 2020: FILM In a year that missed so much, our writers focus on the biggest hits

In a year that missed so much, our writers focus on the biggest hits

It all started so promisingly. Parasite's triumph at the Oscars was a resounding response to 2019's saccharine and problematic Green Book. Art house was in and here to stay. And in some ways, this came to pass - with cinemas caught in a cycle of opening and closing, the blockbusters were nowhere to be seen.

The Midnight Sky review – flawed but moving apocalyptic sci-fi

★★★ THE MIDNIGHT SKY Flawed but moving apocalyptic sci-fi

George Clooney directs and stars, as a scientist with a grim warning

The last time George Clooney was in a space movie, Gravity, he and Sandra Bullock were marooned above Earth and desperate to get home. The Midnight Sky has the opposite dynamic: here Clooney is Earthbound, urgently trying to warn incomers to stay the hell away. As science-fiction premises go, it feels rather apt. 

Filmmaker Frank Marshall: 'People don’t understand what geniuses The Bee Gees were'

Director of the new Bee Gees documentary discusses the brothers' legacy in music

Frank Marshall might not be the biggest household name, but his footprint on Hollywood is unrivalled. He has produced hits ranging from Indiana Jones and Back to the Future to Jason Bourne and Jurassic World. He also takes occasional forays into directing, such as the madcap Arachnophobia and cannibalistic rugby tale Alive.

Blu-ray: Goodbye, Dragon Inn

★★★★ GOODBYE, DRAGON INN BY TSAI MING-LIANG A poetic tribute to cinema-going itself

A poetic tribute to cinema-going itself from Taiwanese director Tsai Ming-Liang

In his exclusive half-hour-plus interview for distributor Second Run, the affable Tsai Ming-Liang makes a striking admission: “I make very uncommercial films.” Viewers of the extra will most likely have just finished Goodbye, Dragon Inn (Bú sàn) (2003), Ming-liang’s feature-length exploration of precisely everything that comes of those pesky “uncommercial films”.

Another Round review - delight and despair

★★★ ANOTHER ROUND Delight and despair

Mads Mikkelsen stars in Thomas Vinterberg’s alcohol-fumed tragicomedy

You can practically smell the fumes coming off Thomas Vinterbergs latest drama Another Round, known in Denmark simply as "Druk". Co-written with Tobias Lindholm, the story is anchored in a theory proposed by Finn Skårderud that humans have a blood alcohol level that is 0.05 percent too low. Therefore, to function at our best, we need to top it up. 

Leap of Faith review – Alexandre O. Philippe examines ‘The Exorcist’

★★★★ LEAP OF FAITH Feature-length interview with 'Exorcist' director William Friedkin

The director tackles the Oscar-winner in feature-length interview with William Friedkin

Films are about the mystery of fate or the mystery of faith,” proclaims director William Friedkin in Alexandre O. Philippe’s latest documentary, Leap of Faith. At 84 years old, Friedkin proves himself to be a master of storytelling, not only behind the camera but in front of it, spiritedly discussing the genesis of his horror masterpiece with Philippe.