All articles by Wendy Ide, Senior international critic – Page 36
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Reviews‘Body Of Water’: Glasgow Review
Lucy Brydon makes her directing debut with this intense drama about anorexia
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Reviews
‘Love Sarah’: Glasgow Review
When a promising baker dies, her family and friends join together to open her dream cake shop
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Reviews‘Roy’s World: Barry Gifford’s Chicago’: Glasgow Review
Impressionistic documentary collage about writer Barry Gifford and his Chicago hometown
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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
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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
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Reviews‘High Ground’: Berlin Review
An ex-World War II sniper tracks an Aboriginal warrior through Northern Australia
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Reviews‘Veins Of The World’: Berlin Review
A fiction debut form Mongolia and the director of ’The Story Of The Weeping Camel’
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Reviews‘One Of These Days’: Berlin Review
Carrie Preston and Joe Cole headline this cautionary tale of a Texan endurance competition
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Reviews‘Black Milk’: Berlin Review
After years of living in Germany, a Mongolian woman returns home to her sister
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Reviews‘Swimming Out Till The Sea Turns Blue’: Berlin Review
Source: X Stream Pictures ‘Swimming Out Till The Sea Turns Blue’ Dir: Jia Zhang-ke. China. 2020. 112mins Taking as its jumping off point a literary event in a village in China’s Shanxi Province (the director’s native region), this documentary looks at aspects of Chinese life and history ...
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Reviews‘Cocoon’: Berlin Review
Leonie Kripendorff’s coming-out drama opens the Generation sidebar at the Berlinale
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Reviews‘The Intruder’: Berlin Review
Natalie Meta’s ‘stridently entertaining’ second film plays in Competition at the Berlinale
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Reviews‘My Salinger Year’: Berlin Review
The Berlinale opens with a muted adaptation of Joanna Rakoff’s popular memoir
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Reviews‘Mogul Mowgli’: Review
Riz Ahmed plays a first generation rap artist, at odds with his world - and eventually his body.
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Reviews‘A Perfectly Normal Family’: Rotterdam Review
A daughter watches her father transition in this carefully-observed debut, winner of Rotterdam’s Big Screen award
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Reviews‘The Cloud In Her Room’: Rotterdam Review
Noteworthy debut from this female director marks a new voice in Chinese cinema
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Reviews‘The Evening Hour’: Rotterdam Review
The grandson of a preacherman plies his trade in an opioid-afflicted West Virginia town














