Blu-ray: EO

Jerzy Skolimowski’s asinine odyssey, with enticing extras

The ne plus ultra of donkey films remains Robert Bresson’s heartbreaking Au hazard Balthazar (1966). Veteran Polish director Jerzy Skolimowski’s EO, premiered at last year’s Cannes Festival, is a very loose variant, Skolimowski revealing in a booklet interview with David Thompson that Balthazar “was the only film at which I really shed a tear at the end”.

Pacifiction review - portending hell in paradise

★★★★★ PACIFICTION Albert Serra's spellbinding anti-colonial drama

The French High Commissioner fears Polynesia's destruction in Albert Serra's spellbinding anti-colonial drama

Paranoia seeps into paradise in Albert Serra’s Pacifiction, a scathing critique of French colonialism on the Polynesian island of Tahiti. Acting on rumours that his overlords are about to resume nuclear testing in the region and fearing his elimination, the urbane High Commissioner De Roller (Benoît Magimel) is forced to turn detective to learn their veracity. It’s not his fault that Inspector Clouseau might do a better job.

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.

Nick Hasted's Top 10 Films of 2022

NICK HASTED'S TOP 10 FILMS OF 2022 Art and commerce have never been more polarised

Art and commerce have never been more polarised

Audrey Diwan’s French abortion drama Happening was the year’s hardest but most luminescent watch, as a fiercely intelligent young woman fights for her future survival as an artist in 1963, when illegal abortion requires wartime subterfuge and bloody violence to female bodies.

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.

Hit the Road review - leaving Tehran for truth and freedom

★★★★ HIT THE ROAD Panah Panahi’s accomplished, witty and humane road movie debut

Panah Panahi’s accomplished, witty and humane debut is a road movie that speaks far beyond his native Iran

The trailer for Panah Panahi’s award-winning first feature Hit the Road is one of the most misleading I’ve yet seen thanks to its jaunty Western pop soundtrack and reassuring caption that the movie resembles an Iranian Little Miss Sunshine.

DVD/Blu-ray: Parallel Mothers

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: PARALLEL MOTHERS Multi-layered meditation on truth, honesty & friendship

Multi-layered meditation on truth, honesty, and friendship

Parallel Mothers unfolds at a daringly slow pace, and there are moments in the first half of Pedro Almodóvar’s 2021 drama when you wish that things would speed up. And then you’re wrong-footed by the unexpected shifts in tone and direction, and amazed at the veteran director’s ability to knit together so many seemingly disparate threads.

Murina review - her father, her jailer

★★★★ MURINA A Croatian teen fights patriarchal abuse in a nerve-jangling coming-of-age drama

A Croatian teen fights patriarchal abuse in a nerve-jangling coming-of-age drama

Murina, the suspenseful first feature written and directed by the Croatian filmmaker Antoneta Alamat Kusijanoviće, depicts a cruel dance that three of the four participants can't or won't stop. Its instigator, a father and husband in thrall to his ruinous machismo, is clueless. The steps – based on love, desire, avarice, jealousy, manipulation and anger – make for a discomfiting coming-of-age drama that won the Camera d’Or at Cannes last year.

Blu-ray: Down by Law

★★★ BLU-RAY: DOWN BY LAW Jim Jarmusch's hip prison break-out comedy 

Jim Jarmusch's hip prison break-out comedy

Does restoration and upgrading to 4K always make a film better? I used to think so but after watching an unnervingly image-perfect Blu-ray of Down by Law, I’m not so sure.