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Film

Are we living in the age of single parent cinema?

Mapping onto a rising real-life demographic, a new fleet of emotionally attuned single parent films, from The Florida Project to Janet Planet, is exploring the gap between parental responsibility and freedom.

Hard-Boiled Rice: The Avant-Garde Noir of Seijun Suzuki

Seijun Suzuki was a maverick of Japanese cinema who served as the antithesis that noir should inherently be rooted in the real world. Though he was a company man for Nikkatsu, it was his tempestuous collaborations with the production studio that inadvertently birthed one of Japan’s most bold anti-establishment auteurs—a playful renegade with a knack for the absurd.

Levan Akin: “Earnestness is something I miss in film”

The Swedish director discusses Crossing, an undulating tale of a retired Georgian woman's search for her trans niece in Istanbul.

Notes from the unrequited: Isabel Sandoval on Wong Kar-wai

Filmmaker Isabel Sandoval explores the crossroads between desire and memory in the cinema of Wong Kar-wai, particularly his 1990 film Days of Being Wild.

Absence as presence in the cinema of Marguerite Duras

Although Duras is better known as a writer, having written 50 books throughout her career, her filmmaking was similarly groundbreaking and prolific. Cici Peng explores the aesthetics of Duras's filmic images, defined by their haunting negativity and relation to the unrepresentable.

A romantic’s guide to summer love on screen

Dreamlike dance sequences in LA, the art of seduction in Spain and ecstasy of first love found in Italy—writer Emma Firth explores the joy of getting lost in a summer romance. 

Modern dance: why we are living in the age of off-kilter choreography

A Yorgos Lanthimos film isn’t a Yorgos Lanthimos film without a strange and jaunty jig. A result of TikTok aesthetics, in recent years the trope of off-kilter choreography has reached far wider than the Greek auteur, says Alex Denney.

Agnieszka Holland: “We are changing Europe into some kind of fortress”

Agnieszka Holland discusses Green Border, a dramatisation of the migration crisis on the Belarus-European Union border, staged from the perspective of refugees and border guards.

Jeanne Moreau and the new Femme Fatale

One of the most significant actors in French film history, Jeanne Moreau made her name playing alluring but troubled heroines. Whilst the term femme fatale followed Moreau to the grave, Kitty Grady explores how Moreau brought a more nuanced definition to the age-old archetype, one that coincided with the birth of the French New Wave.

Why Richard Linklater is “always thinking in the eternal”

The acclaimed director discusses his latest feature Hit Man—an ingenious fusion of noir and screwball that continues his exploration of time, identity and human malleability.