Latest festival reviews – Page 140
-
Reviews
‘Night Shift’ (‘Police’): Berlin Review
Anne Fontaine’s drama boasts weighty performances from Omar Sy, Virginie Efira and Gregory Gadebois
-
Reviews
‘Irradiated’: Berlin Review
Rithy Panh experiments with the documentary form to present a stark exploration of the horrors of modern war
-
Reviews
‘There Is No Evil’: Berlin Review
From Iran, director Mohammad Rasoulof orchestrates a cautionary tale in four chapters
-
-
-
Reviews
‘Days’: Berlin Review
Taiwanese director Tsai Ming-Liang delivers a trademark slow-burn drama about two lonely men finding each other
-
Reviews
‘DAU: Natasha’: Berlin Review
Russian experiment which can be an uncompromisingly confrontational watch
-
Reviews
‘A Common Crime’: Berlin Review
Argentine drama stars Elisa Carricajo as a woman whose mind shatters under the weight of collective guilt
-
Reviews
‘The Roads Not Taken’: Berlin Review
Javier Bardem and Elle Fanning shine as a father and daughter struggling with his dementia
-
Reviews
‘Berlin Alexanderplatz’: Berlin Review
Alfred Doblin’s famed 1929 novel is brought up to date by Burhan Qurbani’s ambitious - and lengthy - film
-
Reviews
‘Los Conductos’: Berlin Review
An intense and disorientating debut from Colombia plays in Berlin’s new Encounters strand
-
Reviews
‘The American Sector’: Berlin Review
An intriguing documentary tracks the Berlin Wall across America
-
Reviews
‘Sleep’: Berlin Review
Sandra Huller stars in this challenging horror that tackles the ghosts of Germany’s past
-
-
Reviews
‘The Woman Who Ran’: Berlin Review
A woman’s encounters with three friends are all interrupted by men in Hong Sangsoo’s teasing drama
-
Reviews
‘Last And First Men’: Berlin Review
A stunning posthumous work from the Icelandic composer Johann Johannsson, narrated by Tilda Swinton
-
Reviews
‘Siberia’: Berlin Review
Willem Dafoe and Abel Ferrara reunite for a film which comes across like the Insta-feed of a well-travelled psychopath
-
Reviews
‘My Little Sister’: Berlin Review
A brother and sister reconnect in Switzerland as he recovers from leukaemia
-
Reviews
‘Servants’: Review
A seminary in Cold War Czechoslovakia is the scene for a compelling second feature from Ivan Ostrochovsky
-
Reviews
‘Delete History’: Berlin Review
Comic masters Benoit Delepine and Gustave Kervern take aim at the human cost of our online world