Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+·NQV Short Films·Short Films·Stream It or Skip It·TV and Streaming Anapidae (Call Me) short film review – Morel’s experimental Super 8/VHS short film weaves a powerful exploration of fear and grief by Neil Baker 29th October 2025
Editors' Choice·Film and Television·In Conversation·TV and Streaming·What to Watch Celebrity Race Across the World (Series Three) BBC One – meet the teams taking part in this year’s epic race from the Caribbean to Colombia by Neil Baker 28th October 2025
Film and Television·Rewind·TV and Streaming·What to Watch What to Watch – FilmFear returns to Channel 4 with a collection of devilishly good movies this Halloween by Neil Baker 25th October 2025
Film and Television·In Conversation·TV and Streaming·What to Watch What to Watch – NightWatch (BBC Two and iPlayer) by Neil Baker 25th October 2025
Editors' Choice·Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+·UK Festivals Pillion (BFI London Film Festival) review – Lighton’s spunky feature directorial debut is full of humour, horniness and heart by Neil Baker 24th October 2025
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·Music and Dance·Music and Dance Reviews·UK Festivals Broken English (BFI London Film Festival) review – Forsyth and Pollard honour Faithfull’s rebellious spirit and unbridled talent by Neil Baker 23rd October 2025
Editors' Choice·Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·UK Festivals Wasteman (BFI London Film Festival) review – bold and breathless in its intensity, McMau’s film is a fearless feature debut by Neil Baker 22nd October 2025
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·Short Films·UK Festivals The Souffleur (BFI London Film Festival) review – the inner turmoil of a man caught in the headlights of apparent change and progress by Neil Baker 20th October 2025
Art and Photography·Editors' Choice·Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·UK Festivals The Love That Remains (BFI London Film Festival) review – a visually stunning, obscure yet enthralling work of art by Neil Baker 18th October 2025
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·Music and Dance·Music and Dance Reviews·UK Festivals Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere (BFI London Film Festival) review – Cooper keeps us at a distance from the man and the artist by Neil Baker 18th October 2025
1 Fuze (review) – impressively crafted, but unable to find the necessary balance between its plotlines 3rd April 2026
2 Montreal, My Beautiful (BFI Flare) review – Joan Chen shines in an unreservedly bold and intimate study of a migrant family in flux 1st April 2026
3 As Noah Jupe and Sadie Sink take to the stage in Romeo & Juliet, Jane Jung explores the endlessly reimagined Shakespeare classic 1st April 2026
4 The Super Mario Galaxy Movie (review) – proof that catering to the banal sensibilities of fanboys only hinders the creative process 31st March 2026
5 Night Stage (review) – a bold, thrilling and breathless erotic dance through Porto Alegre 30th March 2026
6 A Tale of Two Cities – first look at Kit Harington, François Civil and Mirren Mack in the new BBC and MGM+ adaptation of Dickens’ classic 30th March 2026
7 Out Laws (BFI Flare) review – a thoughtful, urgent, and personal journey into colonial legacy, human rights, and history 29th March 2026
8 Race Across the World (series six) BBC One – meet the teams taking part in this year’s epic race across Europe and Asia 29th March 2026
9 New venues and an opening night under the stars, the 28th OUTshine LGBTQ+ Film Festival announces its programme 27th March 2026
10 What Will I Become? (BFI Flare) review – a powerful, emotional, heartfelt and urgent exploration of the transmasculine experience 25th March 2026
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