Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·UK Festivals LOLA (FrightFest) review – Legge’s temporal paradox drama is a fascinating exploration of ethical reasoning by Neil Baker 28th August 2022
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+·Stream It or Skip It·TV and Streaming·UK Festivals Wreck (FrightFest 2022) review – all aboard for Ryan J. Brown’s quacking BBC Three cruise ship slasher by Neil Baker 26th August 2022
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·Short Films·UK Festivals FrightFest Bites 2022 – a collection of quick read reviews from this year’s FrightFest London by Neil Baker 18th August 2022
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·In Conversation·UK Festivals A Bunch of Amateurs (Sheffield DocFest) – in conversation with Kim Hopkins and the Bradford Movie Makers by Neil Baker 12th July 2022
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+·UK Festivals Lyra (Sheffield DocFest) review – a journey wrapped in the Northern Ireland peace process and a reminder of how fragile it is by Neil Baker 29th June 2022
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+·Music and Dance·Music and Dance Reviews·UK Festivals Nothing Compares (Sheffield DocFest) review – a journey of bravery, artistry and defiance full of emotional rage by Neil Baker 26th June 2022
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and TV News·LGBTQ+·UK Festivals Queer East Film Festival announces 2022 programme by Neil Baker 27th April 2022
Art and Photography·Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+·UK Festivals Ultraviolette and the Blood-Spitters Gang (BFI Flare) review – avant-garde artistry from a distance by Jasmine Valentine 8th April 2022
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+·Music and Dance·Theatre·UK Festivals Boulevard! A Hollywood Story (BFI Flare) review – the sunset of a musical dream by Agnes Sajti 2nd April 2022
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·LGBTQ+·UK Festivals The Novice (BFI Flare) review – a sensory gift that keeps on giving but struggles to hold its intrigue by Jasmine Valentine 31st March 2022
1 Cutaways (Stream It or Skip It) – a sharp and observant exploration of the ruthless amphitheatre that is the entertainment industry 7th April 2026
2 Chatlines (review) – an emotional rollercoaster full of humour, love and hope, that carves a place in the heart and demands multiple viewings 7th April 2026
3 The Male Gaze: Naughty Boys (NQV Media) Stream It or Skip It – an unmissable selection box of globetrotting cinematic treats 6th April 2026
4 Upon Her Lips: She Likes Girls (NQV Media) Stream It or Skip It – love, separation and transformation through a global female lens 4th April 2026
5 Fuze (review) – impressively crafted, but unable to find the necessary balance between its plotlines 3rd April 2026
6 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
7 As Noah Jupe and Sadie Sink take to the stage in Romeo & Juliet, Jane Jung explores the endlessly reimagined Shakespeare classic 1st April 2026
8 The Super Mario Galaxy Movie (review) – proof that catering to the banal sensibilities of fanboys only hinders the creative process 31st March 2026
9 Night Stage (review) – a bold, thrilling and breathless erotic dance through Porto Alegre 30th March 2026
10 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
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