The Hollywood director of the Oscar-winning movie The Artist on why his next project, out this week, could never have worked as a live-action film
By James Mottram
The original play allowed no space for the reality of Israel or Gaza today – and the film follows suit
By Jane Prinsley
Lars Jacobson’s violent action-comedy is about an assistant bank manager who can’t feel pain
By John Nathan
Films about journalism can make great thrillers but Mark Anthony Green’s debut requires the audience to suspend more belief than is reasonable
As Clueless hits the West End in a new musical version of the hit film, Amy Heckerling answers the question she has preferred to avoid for the past 30 years
For the Oscar-winning Parasite director’s latest film think Dr Strangelove aboard an intergalactic ship
The former Baywatch star’s tender portrayal of a Las Vegas performer in her middle years reveals serious acting talent
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Israeli director Lior Geller on his new movie The World Will Tremble
Guillaume Ribot’s film has been culled from unseen footage that Claude Lanzmann’s filmed for his epic documentary, Shoah
To hell with all those health risks. The day I lit up again was the day my worries went up in smoke
By Mark Solomons
As we enter an era of strong-men politics, this Brazilian film is a reminder of the price they exact
Brody’s Holocaust survivor epic The Brutalist was the pick of the night as it swept four gongs
By Ellie Grant
Protesters called for boycott of Captain America: Brave New World over the inclusion of character played by Shira Haas
By Eliana Jordan
This is the moving comedy we all need to watch on 14 February
By Nicole Lampert
A viral video of the campaign, which transpired to be AI-generated, only serves to highlight the deafening silence of the celebrity class
Jewish actors and creatives are in the hunt for gongs across almost every category of this year’s awards
The director and Jewish actors in the new movie on the questions it raises about the reporting of terrorism… live
The complainants have got it all wrong. This Oscar-nominated movie is not about Adrien Brody’s Hungarian-Jewish architect, it’s an argument for culture
Mel Gibson’s thriller is set almost entirely in the cabin of a plane as it flies over the bleak Alaskan mountains, and that is the best thing about it
To mark 80 years since Auschwitz’s liberation, a new BBC film commemorates the 15 orchestras of Auschwitz
By Elisa Bray
Brady Corbet’s new movie stars Adrien Brody as a mid-century designer and a Shoah survivor and pays tribute to the beauty of architecture, a discipline rarely celebrated on the screen
As its title promises, the film perpetuates a messianic-like mystery about the troubadour, but if you want to see an actor at the top of his game you are in for a treat
Nicole Kidman’s character appears to have it all, but her sex life is not what she needs it to be