Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982) – a love letter to the classic war movie, the revenge thriller and Shakespeare’s tragedies by Neil Baker 20th June 2022
Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews Vanishing Point (1971) – an anti-establishment road trip that oozes coolness by Agnes Sajti 12th June 2022
Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews Miss Stevens (2016) – two unlikely souls briefly converge before separating forever by Neil Baker 5th June 2022
Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews Paper Moon (1973) – a timeless classic and one of Bogdanovich’s finest movies by Agnes Sajti 15th May 2022
Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews Slow West (2015) – a foolhardy journey, built on teenage love, slowly crumbles in a world of cruelty and violence by Neil Baker 8th May 2022
Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews The Hepburn and Tracy Collection celebrates a golden Hollywood partnership by Agnes Sajti 7th May 2022
Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews The Apu Trilogy (1955 – 1959) – Satyajit Ray’s epic trilogy is a cinematic masterpiece by Agnes Sajti 7th May 2022
Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews Lost in La Mancha (2002) – pursuing your dreams can be a path to glory or ruination by Niall Glynn 21st April 2022
Film and Television·Film Reviews·Rewind·Rewind Reviews Antoine et Colette (1962) – an ode to the impossible one-sided love affairs of adolescence by Niall Glynn 29th March 2022
Film and Television·LGBTQ+·Rewind·Rewind Reviews Call Me By Your Name (2017) – Guadagnino’s garden of teenage longing, desire and emerging sexuality by Neil Baker 27th March 2022
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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