The characters work well...but there’s never quite enough energy to events.
~ Jennie Kermode -
Ahmed doesn’t need to include war footage for us to feel its weight and understand its shadow.
~ Amber Wilkinson -
The colour elements prove all the more striking when in contrast to black and white.
~ Amber Wilkinson -
The beautiful cinematography, the bluesy jazz score and the gentle pace of the film are beguiling, but Masciari makes sure that we don’t lose sight of the ridiculous.
~ Jennie Kermode -
Shot over 17 years, it mingles intimate personal moments with visceral concert footage, its musical sequences knitted together with some of the best editing you’re likely to see this year.
~ Jennie Kermode -
History comes alive in the voices of those who remember it.
~ Amber Wilkinson -
The choice of hand-drawn animation and its ability to demonstrate a magical realism allows the film to find the right distance from what is being depicted.
~ Richard Mowe -
Successfully finds insight and social commentary
~ Jeremy Mathews -
The pace of the action helps Handal to pack a lot in and his framing is inventive.
~ Amber Wilkinson -
A Teacher is not the most finely crafted film, but it is a cri de cœur.
~ Jennie Kermode -
The filmmaker and her crew deserve a lot of credit for even managing to capture this lifestyle – not to mention following it for five years.
~ Amber Wilkinson -
Breslin, as so often, is the standout.
~ Jennie Kermode -
The observational approach works against the director, slowing down proceedings and making it hard to see the wood for the trees
~ Amber Wilkinson -
Lotus may love pretty things, but he doesn’t hold back on the gore.
~ Jennie Kermode -
With so much going on the only shame is that at this length the pirouettes in various directions are so brief, giving us a taste for ideas that are begging to be dug into further.
~ Amber Wilkinson -
While the film is generally a delight, the increasingly surreal third act can be hard to track.
~ Antoni Konieczny -
A patient, affecting study of human connection in unusual circumstances
~ Antoni Konieczny -
The irreverent score, the gothic art direction, and Mario Tosi’s kaleidoscopic, slithering cinematography coalesce into something mesmeric.
~ Antoni Konieczny -
Like its subject, the film is a fusion of styles.
~ Jennie Kermode -
Fiennes is lean in look and in performance, bringing an intensity that proves compelling.
~ Amber Wilkinson -
Having set up all the elements of a thriller, the film proceeds to untangle them in a refreshingly different and mature way.
~ Jennie Kermode -
Fiennes is lean in look and in performance, bringing an intensity that proves compelling.
~ Amber Wilkinson -
[Hart] doesn’t turn up the volume, but uses tone and repetition so effectively that the film becomes a microcosm of the real experience.
~ Jennie Kermode -
I Am Love is social melodrama in the best traditions of Italian cinema.
~ Chris -
Anime at its very finest - lightning paced, visually stunning, feverishly creative and overrun by a logic all its own.
~ Anton Bitel -
The action is pacy but that doesn’t mean Courvoisier skims the surface.