Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·UK Festivals You Can Call Me Bill (BFI London Film Festival) review – a surprisingly tender, loving and enthralling documentary by Neil Baker 9th October 2023
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·Stream It or Skip It·TV and Streaming·UK Festivals Fingernails (BFI London Film Festival) review – Nikou asks us to explore the true nature of love and attraction by Neil Baker 9th October 2023
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+·Stream It or Skip It·TV and Streaming·UK Festivals Bonus Track (BFI London Film Festival) review – a feel-good rom-com that celebrates gay teenage love through beautifully timed comedy by Neil Baker 6th October 2023
Film and Television·Stream It or Skip It·TV and Streaming Everything Now (Netflix) review – paints itself with shades of reality but never comes close to a complete picture by Sabastian Astley 6th October 2023
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·UK Festivals The Mission (BFI London Film Festival) review – John Chau was no fool; he was just a boy who wanted to explore and got lost along the way by Sabastian Astley 3rd October 2023
Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews Cry, the Beloved Country (1951) – a defiant cry for human rights and an end to oppression by Neil Baker 1st October 2023
Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews Cruise Control – as Top Gun: Maverick arrives in cinemas, we look back at the magic of Top Gun and its star by Neil Baker 29th September 2023
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film and TV News·UK Festivals Pigeon Shrine FrightFest Halloween announces its 2023 line-up by Neil Baker 28th September 2023
Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film and TV News·UK Festivals The UK Jewish Film Festival 2023 by Neil Baker 28th September 2023
Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews Art, horror, fashion, food and bodily gas in Peter Strickland’s wickedly absurd Flux Gourmet and In Fabric by Neil Baker 23rd September 2023
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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