All articles by Fionnuala Halligan – Page 19
-
Reviews
‘Mangrove’: NYFF Review
Steve McQueen’s Small Axe series turns its attention to the trial of the ‘Mangrove 9’
-
Reviews
‘Courtroom 3H’: San Sebastian Review
Antonio Mendez Esparza follows in the footsteps of Frederick Wiseman with this powerful documentary set inside a Florida family court
-
Reviews
‘Supernova’: San Sebastian Review
Staney Tucci, Colin Firth face the end of the road in Harry Macqueen’s ’Supernova’
-
Reviews
‘We Are Who We Are’: TV Review (San Sebastian)
Luca Guadagnino delivers a long-form Italian odyssey for HBO
-
Reviews
‘Patria’: TV Review (San Sebastian)
HBO Europe premieres its complex drama about the Basque separatist movement ETA
-
Reviews
‘Rifkin’s Festival’: San Sebastian Review
Woody Allen’s latest was shot in the film festival it now opens
-
Reviews
‘Lovers Rock’: NYFF Review
The first of Steve McQueen’s ‘Small Axe’ films opens the New York Film Festival
-
News
Five talking points from an extraordinary Venice Film Festival
It was a year like no other but the talking points are familiar.
-
-
-
Reviews
‘Nowhere Special’: Venice Review
James Norton tries to find a home for his young boy in Uberto Pasolini’s tender tearjerker
-
Reviews
‘New Order’: Venice Review
Michel Franco’s dystopian howl is dynamic cinema which takes no prisoners
-
Reviews
‘Ammonite’: Toronto Review
Francis Lee follows up ‘God’s Own Country’ with a solemn love story sparked by Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan
-
Reviews
‘Nomadland’: Venice Review
Starring Frances McDormand, Chloe Zhao’s poetic migrant worker drama holds a mirror to society
-
-
Features
How will the Covid-19 crisis transform the upcoming awards season?
The coming awards season is going to look very different given the depth of the pandemic and the global crisis in cinema.
-
Reviews
‘One Night In Miami’: Venice Review
Regina King adapts the award-winning stage play by Kemp Powers
-
Reviews
‘Miss Marx’: Venice Review
Susanna Nicchiarelli pays tribute to Karl Marx’s youngest daughter, Eleanor
-
-
Reviews
‘Padrenostro’: Venice Review
Inspired by Claudio Noce’s childhood, this assassination drama morphs into a father-son tale