Can’t decide what to make time for at BFI London Film Festival 2024? Discover some of the most intriguing films on the programme, reviewed and recommended by Sight and Sound critics.
Déa Kulumbegashvili follows up her masterpiece Beginning (2020) with an unflinching story of a Georgian obstetrician whose career is threatened by her reputation as an abortionist.
The new tax reliefs will empower UK filmmakers to create more independent films and co-produce with other countries.
Identifying Features filmmakers Astrid Rondero and Fernanda Valadez tell us about their latest drama Sujo, which follows a boy seeking to escape cycles of violence in rural Mexico.
H.G. Wells 150th anniversary: 10 essential film adaptations from the godfather of sci-fi ...
Creative Assembly‘s 2014 video game took inspiration (and original design documents) from Ridley Scott‘s 1979 ‘haunted house in space’ horror. The result was a tense and claustrophobic experience that ...
The following rules are in the interest of fair use and encouraging a pleasant viewing environment for all. Digital material may be restricted from access in the BFI Southbank Mediatheque on the ...
Young Frankenstein is alive again, while a jet-black 1990s satire and a medieval epic arrive on Blu-ray. What are you watching this weekend?
A stray bull forces grape pickers into the trees in Marta Mateus’s poetic debut feature Fire of Wind. We caught up with the director ahead of its screening at the BFI London Film Festival.
Steve McQueen takes us inside his new film Blitz Inside: Sean Baker on Anora, and sex work at the movies – Pedro Almodóvar on The Room Next Door – No Other Land – The Apprentice – The Wild Robot – Jea ...
The events surrounding the Democratic Republic of Congo’s declaration of independence and the subsequent assassination of prime minister Patrice Lumumba are laid out with cool precision to a ...