Rebel. Hero. Hustler. God.
So goes the tagline to Diego Maradona, the new documentary about the legendary – and legendarily complicated – Argentine footballer directed by Asif Kapadia.
So goes the tagline to Diego Maradona, the new documentary about the legendary – and legendarily complicated – Argentine footballer directed by Asif Kapadia.
Following her scores for Under the Skin and Jackie, the London experimentalist is now orchestrating for a new teen survival thriller.
For the past three nights Skeppy’s been offering up a utopia within a dystopia at Manchester International Festival. No phones, no socials. All love and AI.
Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s three-hour masterpiece was up for four gongs at last night’s Oscars, winning Best International Feature Film. Hungry for more Japanese cinema amidst all the hype? Here’s what to watch next.
London Film Festival: THE FACE speaks to the director and lead actor of the noir detective drama, Park Chan-wook and star Park Hae-il.
London Film Festival: the Londoner is starring in the other must-watch TV drama of the season (the other being Succession) (you knew that).
Fishbowls, blowjobs and cheesy Euro-bangers: the powerful and provocative Cannes prize-winner is the holiday film to end them all. We asked its cast and crew all about it.
Time to get poolside for a second season in the sun for HBO’s hit dramedy. This time, we’re in Sicily, with the British actor, director and writer among a mostly new cast of the rich and bonkers.
The BAFTA-nominated filmmaker turns his attention to the rituals of everyday Black life in his new project, rituals: Unionblack.
Emerald Fennell and Carey Mulligan, the director and star of 2021’s smartest, sharpest, darkest thriller, discuss rape, romcoms, revenge and how a Britney banger put the Toxic in toxic masculinity.
The funniest, busiest multi-hyphenate in the biz brings a rebellious spirit to every project, including his latest addition to the MCU, Thor: Love and Thunder. How does he do it? And where are his shoes?
Delving into the wardrobes of the season’s deadliest on-screen psychopaths. The ones that look just like us.
Sexual assault, sexual pleasure, consent, defiance, survival: the Londoner packs a powerful punch with her provocative new TV series I May Destroy You.
This weekend’s coronation feels like getting added to a 67-person birthday WhatsApp group by someone you don’t really know.
The real-life recording of a desperate phone call made by a six-year-old girl in Gaza is at the heart of this Oscar-nominated film. 28-year-old actress Saja Kilani discusses the urgent experience of making the film.