Film and Arts Festivals·Film and TV News·UK Festivals BFI Flare 2020 – Special Presentations announced ahead of full programme launch by Neil Baker 14th February 2020
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·UK Festivals The Personal History of David Copperfield (BFI London Film Festival) review – a vivid, colourful, bold and new Copperfield adaptation by Neil Baker 22nd January 2020
Editors' Choice·Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+·UK Festivals Matthias & Maxime (BFI London Film Festival) review – a simple kiss unlocks years of repressed desire and love by Neil Baker 16th October 2019
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·UK Festivals The Lighthouse (BFI London Film Festival) review – “Doldrums. Doldrums. Eviler than the Devil” by Neil Baker 14th October 2019
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·UK Festivals Saint Maud (BFI London Film Festival) review – a stunning and formidable psychodrama of exquisite performances by Neil Baker 13th October 2019
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·UK Festivals Knives Out (BFI London Film Festival) review – a glorious modern whodunit full of humour, wit, energy and charm by Neil Baker 11th October 2019
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·UK Festivals Honey Boy (BFI London Film Festival) review – childhood fame and the misguided support of a troubled parent by Neil Baker 7th October 2019
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·UK Festivals Jojo Rabbit (BFI London Film Festival) review – a smart, sharp and satirical dissection of hate and fascism by Neil Baker 7th October 2019
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+·UK Festivals Monsoon (BFI London Film Festival) review – a home that sits between two worlds, both pulling in different directions by Neil Baker 7th October 2019
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·UK Festivals The King (BFI London Film Festival) review – Michôd’s film isn’t perfect, but it does open the door to Shakespeare for a new generation by Neil Baker 6th October 2019
1 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
2 Fuze (review) – impressively crafted, but unable to find the necessary balance between its plotlines 3rd April 2026
3 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
4 As Noah Jupe and Sadie Sink take to the stage in Romeo & Juliet, Jane Jung explores the endlessly reimagined Shakespeare classic 1st April 2026
5 The Super Mario Galaxy Movie (review) – proof that catering to the banal sensibilities of fanboys only hinders the creative process 31st March 2026
6 Night Stage (review) – a bold, thrilling and breathless erotic dance through Porto Alegre 30th March 2026
7 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
8 Out Laws (BFI Flare) review – a thoughtful, urgent, and personal journey into colonial legacy, human rights, and history 29th March 2026
9 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
10 New venues and an opening night under the stars, the 28th OUTshine LGBTQ+ Film Festival announces its programme 27th March 2026
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