Film and Television·Film Reviews See How They Run (review) – a wickedly fun farce through London’s West End that plays as a romantic valentine to Hitchcock & Christie by Sabastian Astley 11th September 2022
Film and Television·Film Reviews·TV and Streaming Reviews County Lines (BFI Player) – Stream It or Skip It by Neil Baker 30th November 2020
Editors' Choice·Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+·Rewind·Rewind Reviews·Short Films Cinerama Capsule 2020 – 2025 (reviews) by Neil Baker 1st September 2018
Editors' Choice·Film and Arts Festivals·Film and Television·Film Reviews·LGBTQ+ BFI Flare 2018 (reviews) – our coverage from London LGBTQIA+ Film Festival by Neil Baker 2nd April 2018
1 Shoot the People (review) – a reflective documentary that places Misan Harriman in front of the camera 1st July 2026
2 The Invite (review) – Olivia Wilde’s uproarious film is as quick-witted and heartfelt as it is deliberately uncomfortable 28th June 2026
3 A Private Life (review) – an intriguing, albeit scattershot, thriller with atmosphere and empathy in abundance 26th June 2026
4 RA Summer Exhibition 2026 (review) – Ryan Gander brings wit, whimsy and connection to the Royal Academy of Arts this season 26th June 2026
6 Supergirl (review) – Millie Alcock shines in an otherwise shaky continuation of James Gunn’s DCU 24th June 2026
7 King’s Head Theatre places technology, politics, and sexuality in the spotlight for its Autumn season 2026 24th June 2026
8 Mother Mary (review) – a woman trying to reconcile who she is with the version of herself that everyone else seems to recognise 23rd June 2026
9 Toy Story 5 (review) – Pixar’s most iconic franchise returns, and while it may not be as fresh, it’s as joyous, funny and sincere as ever 22nd June 2026
10 Hope is a Word (Sheffield DocFest) review – a collective fight for change, rich with poetry, power, and personal stories 20th June 2026
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