Rotterdam reviews – Page 2
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Reviews‘Greice’: Rotterdam Review
A Brazilian student in Lisbon spins a web of white lies in this mild-mannered comedy
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Reviews‘Swimming Home’: Rotterdam Review
An unexpected house guest upsets a family dynamic in this UK adaptation of the Man Booker Prize-nominated novel
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Reviews‘The Worst Man In London’: Rotterdam Review
Real-life art dealer Charles Augustus Howell is the eponymous cad of this 19th-century period piece
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Reviews‘13 Bombs’: Rotterdam Review
Jakarta authorities race to find explosives hidden across the city in this fast-paced ’24’-style thriller
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Reviews‘Flathead’: Rotterdam Review
Docu-fiction follows a raddled septuagenarian returning to his blue-collar childhood home in Australia
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Reviews‘Eternal’: Rotterdam Review
Eco-disaster sci-fi from Denmark starring pop singer Oh Land is also an off-beat love story
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Reviews’Small Hours Of The Night’: Rotterdam Review
Bold chamber drama from Singapore is set in a prison cell with a single protagonist representing the city-state’s restrictive history
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Reviews‘Hammarskjold - Fight For Peace’: Rotterdam Review
Stately biopic explores the final weeks of former UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold
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Reviews‘Milk Teeth’: Rotterdam Review
A child threatens the security of an isolated village in this atmospheric feature debut from Swiss director Sophia Bosch
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Reviews‘Veni Vidi Vici’: Rotterdam Review
Sharp Austrian satire takes careful aim at the lifestyles of the super-rich
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Reviews‘Head South’: Rotterdam Review
A teenage boy embraces New Zealand’s late Seventies post-punk scene in Jonathan Oglivie’s Rotterdam opener
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Reviews‘DEPOT - Reflecting Boijmans’: Review
Rotterdam’s state-of-the-art statement by Sonia Herman Dolz is an irrestible advert for an edifice
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Reviews’Endless Borders’: Rotterdam Review
Rotterdam’s Big Screen winner takes place on Iran’s remote and troubled border with Afghanistan
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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
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Reviews‘La Palisiada’: Rotterdam Review
Darkly comic Ukrainian cop thriller effectively mines the country’s difficult post-Soviet history
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Reviews‘Joram’: Rotterdam Review
Devashish Makhija’s cat-and-mouse thriller is a race across India’s troubled interior
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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
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Reviews‘Copenhagen Does Not Exist’: Rotterdam Review
A man looks back over an intense relationship in this Danish drama written by Eskil Vogt
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Reviews‘Four Little Adults’: Rotterdam Review
A middle-class couple try a lifestyle of polyamory in this Finnish comedy of manners
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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’
















