Under the Fig Trees review - a sensual day in the Tunisian sun

A loving look at vibrant young women flirting, working and fighting constraint

Tunisian lives unfold over a working day in Erige Sehiri’s debut Under the Fig Trees, with fig-picking the backdrop to furtive, sparking collisions between men and women. Love, liberation and oppression all take their turn under the sun as community is strengthened or challenged, and a society is subtly implied.

Inland review - a cracked mosaic of memories, impressions and lurking anxiety

★★★ INLAND A cracked mosaic of memories, impressions and lurking anxiety

An enigmatic and allusive debut feature from Fridtjof Ryder

Fridtjof Ryder’s debut feature made a strong impression at last year’s London Film Festival, and its cinema release ought to give the Gloucester-born director’s career a hefty shove in the right direction. Although that doesn’t mean that Inland is an especially easy-viewing experience.

Blu-ray: A Woman Kills

A lost treasure from May '68 Paris radically considers a transvestite serial killer

May 1968. As France’s Fifth Republic shook, radical director Jean-Denis Bonan divided his time in the Paris streets between filming protests and the fictional hunt for a cross-dressing serial killer. A Woman Kills lay unfinished and forgotten till 2010, a rough-edged film maudit from a tumultuous time.

Creature review - Asif Kapadia shines light on a dark dance piece

★★★★ CREATURE Asif Kapadia shines light on Akram Khan’s dark dance piece

The ballet has been transformed by a film version that gets up close and personal

Filmed ballets involve a different way of watching: you may know a piece well, but you aren’t used to staring into its lead dancers’ eyes as they perform their roles. Not all dancers give good close-up, either. But a new film by the Oscar-winning director Asif Kapadia of Akram Khan’s Creature, made for English National Ballet in 2021, has transformed the original live version into a moving drama.

Blu-ray: Ingmar Bergman Vol 4

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: INGMAR BERGMAN VOL 4 The Swedish master-magician's late mid-life movies

The Swedish master-magician of the cinema's late mid-life movies

Another box-set from the BFI full of Bergman treasures, from core catalogue classics such as Fanny and Alexander (1982), Cries and Whispers (1972), Autumn Sonata (1978) and Scenes from a Marriage (1973) to less well-known films such as After the Rehearsal (1984) and From the Lives of Marionettes (1980).

Markie Robson-Scott's Top 10 Films of 2022

MARKIE ROBSON-SCOTT'S TOP 10 FILMS OF THE YEAR Quirks, strangeness and charm

Quirks, strangeness and charm in the cinematic year

Madness, introspection, and childhood trauma all feature in the best films of 2022: a good year for delving deep. Triangle of Sadness is over-the-top, cathartic lunacy – don’t see it before going on a cruise – while The Banshees of Inisherin and Nope are marvellously mad in their own ways.

Directors the Dardenne brothers: 'To be living means to be fragile'

FILM DIRECTORS JEAN-PIERRE AND LUC DARDENNE 'To be living means to be fragile'

The Belgian masters discuss 'Tori and Lokita', and finding humanity on film

Belgian brothers Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne have made their home region of Liège the site of excruciating moral crises and crushing injustice. Their 12 masterful, double Palme d'Or-winning films act as parables for the embattled human soul.

Blu-ray: The Trial

Sixtieth-anniversary, 4K restoration of Orson Welles' visually exhilarating take on Kafka

“Two-percent movie-making and 98% hustling,” Orson Welles sighed not long before his death in 1985. “It’s no way to spend a life.” His 1962 film of Franz Kafka’s The Trial was his penultimate full-scale completed feature, only 1965’s Chimes at Midnight similarly allowing him a regular director’s resources during his last quarter-century (the fraudulent documentary F for Fake from 1973 was later conjured from scraps with filmic legerdemain).