Latest – Page 56
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Reviews
‘I’m Fine (Thanks For Asking)’: SXSW Review
A young single mother tries to make ends meet during the Covid-19 pandemic
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Reviews
‘Jump, Darling’: Flare Review
The late Cloris Leachman delivers a touching swansong in this small-scale Canadian drama
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Reviews
‘The Lost Sons’: SXSW Review
A famous kidnap victim discovered he has never really been found
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Reviews
‘Ma Belle, My Beauty’: SXSW Review
Marion Hill’s France-set debut focuses on the romantic longings of a tangled trio
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Reviews
‘My First Summer’: Flare Review
A sheltered teenager comes to life after a tragic incident in this candyfloss Australian debut
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Reviews
‘Deadly Cuts’: Dublin Review
Scissors at the ready as stylists at a rundown Dublin hairdressing salon get serious
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Reviews
‘Is There Anybody Out There?’: Dublin Review
’Covid crisis’ cinema from the students of Trinity College Dublin
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Reviews
‘Cuban Dancer’: Miami Review
Documentary tells the uplifting story of Alexis Valdes and his move to the US in search of ballet perfection
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Reviews
‘The City Of Wild Beasts’: Miami Review
A young boy is forced to flee Medellín for the mountains and his elderly grandfather in Henry E Rincon’s follow-up to ‘Hero Steps’
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Reviews
‘Le Temps Perdu’: Doclisboa Review
A group of elegant Porteños gathers every week to read aloud from Proust
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Reviews
‘Just 1 Day’: Dublin Review
Screenwriter Erica Li makes her directorial debut with Chris Doyle behind the lens
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Reviews
‘Sir Alex Ferguson: Never Give In’: Glasgow Review
A very human portrait of football’s towering giant
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Reviews
‘Ludi’: Miami Review
A Haitian-born nurse struggles to make a life in Miami in this touching debut from Edson Jean
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Reviews
‘Celts’: Berlin Review
For her debut feature, Milica Tomovic takes the viewer to Belgrade in 1993 and a child’s fractious birthday party
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Reviews
‘Ted K’: Berlin Review
Sharlto Copley stars as the frustrated mathematician who became the Unabomber
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Reviews
‘Poly Styrene: I Am A Cliche’: Glasgow Review
A closer look at the groundbreaking British punk artist
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Reviews
‘A Brixton Tale’: Glasgow Review
South London-set story of social divides plays Slamdance and Glasgow