Exceptional, noteworthy and entertaining new films — and where to watch them. Every week.

Guy Lodge Guy Lodge

Sharp Stick

“A spiky, exhilarating coming-of-age portrait that distils everything people find (delete as appropriate) exciting/aggravating/amusing/alienating/relatable/chaotic about Lena Dunham’s millennial feminist worldview.”

Read More
Catherine Bray Catherine Bray

Bones And All

“Disguised as a dreamy teen romance, [this film] conceals something more monstrous, braiding flashes of nightmarish violence into a rather lovely and elemental expression of the desire to lose yourself.”

Read More
Guy Lodge Guy Lodge

Armageddon Time

“It’s a piercing examination of privilege, dense with political nuance and question — yet it never feels like a screed, since its portrayal of family life is so honest and inhabited, with Anthony Hopkins’ lovely, careworn performance a little hearth of warmth at its centre.”

Read More
Guy Lodge Guy Lodge

The Wonder

“Lelio has constructed a taut thriller of philosophy, granting urgent stakes and an itchy ticking clock to its ideological conflicts.”

Read More
Catherine Bray Catherine Bray

Neptune Frost

“It’s a film that feels conscious of being part of an Afrofuturist tradition, without being starry-eyed or sentimental about what has come before. It’s not about trying to get to the top of the economic ladder, but about dismantling the ladder entirely.”

Read More
Catherine Bray Catherine Bray

Triangle of Sadness

“Humour can be used to humanise monsters (several regrettable political careers have depended on this), but it can also be used to dehumanise people who behave inhumanly, and that’s what Östlund does here so brilliantly.”

Read More
Catherine Bray Catherine Bray

The Banshees of Inisherin

“A magnificent film — by turns hilarious, touching, bleak and wise. This is the finest work of writer-director Martin McDonagh’s career.”

Read More
Guy Lodge Guy Lodge

Decision to Leave

“Ornately and ingeniously plotted as it is, Decision to Leave is a wary, wounded love story first and a procedural puzzle second, powered by what seems a sincerely soulful attraction between two people who know nothing — but somehow see everything — of each other.”

Read More
Guy Lodge Guy Lodge

Nothing Compares

“Kathryn Ferguson’s fine, heart-rending documentary conclusively sets Sinead O’Connor’s troubled story straight, often in her own words — thus disentangling it from years of malicious media bias regarding her personal principles, conflicted religious beliefs and mental illness.”

Read More
Catherine Bray Catherine Bray

Flux Gourmet

“Stones is the physical manifestation of a gut feeling that something isn’t quite right. You can hear and feel the stomach gurglings, the perpetual bloated sensation, the air of overwhelming preoccupation with his internal rumblings, the fear of an explosion.”

Read More
Guy Lodge Guy Lodge

In Front of Your Face

“It doesn’t blend into Hong Sang-soo’s history quite the way his other perfectly delightful Hong diversions do: there’s a yearning, plaintive emotional tenor to it, a crisp aesthetic definition, that has kept it in my mind for the better part of 18 months.”

Read More
Guy Lodge Guy Lodge

Funny Pages

“In making a film about masking your bourgeois familial privilege to make something raw and ugly and true, Kline has, against all odds, done exactly that.”

Read More
Catherine Bray Catherine Bray

Crimes of the Future

“In Cronenberg’s very best work (for me: Dead Ringers, Crash, The Fly), it’s the collision of human frailty with the brutality of surgery/machinery/metamorphosis (delete as applicable) which produces classic Cronenbergian sensation, that constructive/deconstructive intimacy.”

Read More
Catherine Bray Catherine Bray

Official Competition

“From Argentine directing duo Gastón Duprat and Mariano Cohn comes a comedy that begins by plucking some fairly low-hanging fruit (various forms of vanity), before stretching up towards loftier branches (the purpose of art itself).”

Read More
Guy Lodge Guy Lodge

The Feast

The Feast doesn’t trade in Shyamalan-style twists and surprises; rather, it’s an expression of regional rage that swells from the ground up, growing ever more riotously bloody and operatic with each exactingly prepared course.

Read More
Catherine Bray Catherine Bray

Nope

“In an era where information is the new frontier on which conflicts are fought and won, the camera replaces the gun as weapon of choice.”

Read More
Catherine Bray Catherine Bray

Prey

“Given the implications of filming bear-attacks the old-fashioned way, I’m more than happy to give a few CGI critters a pass in an otherwise engaging adventure romp.”

Read More
Guy Lodge Guy Lodge

Hit the Road

“From the get-go, Panar Panahi’s infectious debut goes all in on lovable relatability: Affectionate but put-upon, eccentric but easily recognisable, its misfit family journeying across northern Iran for reasons unknown have instant, easy comic chemistry and credibility.”

Read More
Guy Lodge Guy Lodge

Good Madam

Good Madam is frightening in many of the places you expect, but then lingers in places you don’t: it’s not only South Africans who will watch this and interrogate their own relationship to service, and to the colonialist structures keeping certain social hierarchies in place.”

Read More
Catherine Bray Catherine Bray

The Beatles: Get Back

“When the band starting riffing on the Harry Lime theme from The Third Man, they’re not getting their new material written — except that they are. It’s all part of it.”

Read More