Rotterdam reviews – Page 2
-
Reviews
‘Milk Teeth’: Rotterdam Review
A child threatens the security of an isolated village in this atmospheric feature debut from Swiss director Sophia Bosch
-
Reviews
‘Veni Vidi Vici’: Rotterdam Review
Sharp Austrian satire takes careful aim at the lifestyles of the super-rich
-
Reviews
‘Head South’: Rotterdam Review
A teenage boy embraces New Zealand’s late Seventies post-punk scene in Jonathan Oglivie’s Rotterdam opener
-
Reviews
‘DEPOT - Reflecting Boijmans’: Review
Rotterdam’s state-of-the-art statement by Sonia Herman Dolz is an irrestible advert for an edifice
-
Reviews
’Endless Borders’: Rotterdam Review
Rotterdam’s Big Screen winner takes place on Iran’s remote and troubled border with Afghanistan
-
Reviews
‘The Spectre Of Boko Haram’: Rotterdam Review
Sensitive Tiger-winning documentary looks at the impact of terror group Boko Haram on the lives of young people
-
Reviews
‘La Palisiada’: Rotterdam Review
Darkly comic Ukrainian cop thriller effectively mines the country’s difficult post-Soviet history
-
Reviews
‘Joram’: Rotterdam Review
Devashish Makhija’s cat-and-mouse thriller is a race across India’s troubled interior
-
Reviews
‘A House In Jerusalem’: Rotterdam Review
Muayad Alayan ventures into genre with his third feature, a UK/Palestinian co-production set in a rambling old house in West Jerusalem
-
Reviews
‘Copenhagen Does Not Exist’: Rotterdam Review
A man looks back over an intense relationship in this Danish drama written by Eskil Vogt
-
Reviews
‘Four Little Adults’: Rotterdam Review
A middle-class couple try a lifestyle of polyamory in this Finnish comedy of manners
-
Reviews
‘Luka’: Rotterdam Review
Jessica Woodworth’s solo outing is a visually arresting, narratively dense drama inspired by Dino Buzzati’s 1940 novel ’The Tartar Steppe’
-
Reviews
‘Superposition’: Rotterdam Review
A Danish couple find themselves – literally – while on a rural retreat in Sweden in this confident genre debut
-
Reviews
‘One Win’: Rotterdam Review
Parasite’s Song Kang-ho coaches a struggling volleyball team in this South Korean underdog comedy
-
Reviews
‘One Last Evening’: Rotterdam Review
Dinner with friends turns nasty in this German debut set against the backdrop of the Covid-19 pandemic
-
Reviews
‘Munch’: Rotterdam Review
Rotterdam opens with an expansive biopic of the artist Edvard Munch at four pivotal ages of his life
-
Reviews
‘La Mala Familia’: Rotterdam Review
Intense drama about group of immigrants in Madrid which blurs the line between fiction and reality
-
Reviews
‘To Love Again’: Rotterdam Review
Jury- and Fipresci-prize winner from China looks at modern pressures on an ageing couple
-
Reviews
‘Shabu’: Rotterdam review
Upbeat documentary set in Rotterdam over one summer now heads to Berlin’s Generation Kplus
-
Reviews
‘Excess Will Save Us’: Rotterdam Review
French farming documentary debut blurs the lines between fiction and reality with strange results