Two young Mormon missionaries find themselves entrapped by a villainous Hugh Grant in a gimmicky, zeitgeist-surfing horror that finds its chills in religious debate.
On her 90th birthday, we raise a toast to the incomparable Italian screen star Sophia Loren and 10 of her finest films.
Demi Moore returns in an outrageous body-horror, while a rediscovered epic transports us back to a power struggle in Ancient Egypt. What are you watching this weekend?
Based on a notorious real-life French court case, Cédric Kahn’s gripping film follows the 1975 high-profile murder trial of far-left militant Pierre Goldman.
Director Sarah Friedland explores the human mind in all its frailness and glory with her exquisite drama about a woman with dementia adjusting to a new life at an assisted living facility.
Broadcast on BBC2 in 1984, Threads dramatised the fallout from a nuclear attack on Sheffield with harrowing realism. We look back on a TV movie that scarred a generation of viewers for life.
Matthew Rankin follows in the surrealist footsteps of his debut The Twentieth Century (2019) with a brilliantly bizarre comedy that imagines a Canada where the two official languages are Farsi and ...
In Yield to the Night, Diana Dors plays a woman facing the death sentence for killing her boyfriend’s mistress. It proved a formidable acting flex from a star who’d been underrated as a ‘bombshell’.
Paul Duane, the director of modern Irish folk horror All You Need Is Death, speaks to Robert Wynne-Simmons, whose haunting 1982 film The Outcasts has re-emerged after decades of obscurity.
The key directors who shaped the Indian new wave of formally and thematically radical films that kicked off at the end of the 1960s.