30 years in the making, stop-motion epic MAD GOD is like nothing you’ve seen before
Filled with gruesome horror, lovingly and painstakingly realized, you haven’t seen anything like Mad God and may not want to again.
Movie interviews and reviews, all in one place, including what's on screens in Wales and the rest of the world.
Filled with gruesome horror, lovingly and painstakingly realized, you haven’t seen anything like Mad God and may not want to again.
There’s a lack of real incident and some clumsy exposition in Swan Song but Udo Kier proves a likeable guide through his picaresque history, campily raging into the dying of the light.
English novelist, screenwriter, film producer and director Alex Garland has produced a masterclass with Men, a sensational new psychological horror movie.
An incredibly watchable football film that is not really about football at all, I Am Zlatan is a captivating look at the fine line between success and failure, hero and villain.
It is clear that the entire cast and crew put their hearts and souls into this film, and so refreshing to see this come from an upcoming Welsh production company.
Our June film selections range from homegrown lo-fidelity horror in All My Friends Hate Me to lurid Elvis hagiography in the eponymous biopic.
A cerebral and languid relationship drama that will resonate especially with cinephiles, Bergman Island is a dreamlike meta-excursion into the creative process.
It’s far from perfect but on pure visual splendour alone, Top Gun: Maverick passes with flying colours.
Cop Secret creator Hannes Þór Halldórsson, the former semi-pro goalie in Iceland, juggled shot-stopping – including for the national team – and film directing.
Sumptuously designed, sensitively acted and bursting with pure imagination, Everything Everywhere All At Once is a sheer pleasure to behold and a tour de force to experience.
Well-intentioned sporting drama based on a true story that can’t help but stir the emotions, Jungle Cry sees 12 orphan boys travel from India to take part in 2007’s under-14s Rugby World Cup Championship in Wales.
Heavy on atmosphere and deeply unsettling, occasionally stomach-churning horror A Banquet tensely explores family relationships and grief.
A decidedly un-showy Nordic blend of superhero and fairytale film, The Innocents manages to have more tension than most Marvel showdowns.
The Twin finds a bereaved family in Finland navigating creepy scenarios. British actor Steven Cree, who plays dad Anthony, spoke to Carl Marsh about the making of the film.
Carl Marsh speaks to three people behind The Adventures of Maid Marian on bringing the Robin Hood character to the screen, and the trials therein.
From Doctor Strange to Top Gun: Maverick to Men, Keiron Self takes a look at what's on offer at the cinema this May.
A dread fuelled Scandi-horror that blends elements of Midsommar and Rosemary’s Baby to creepy effect, The Twin is another of Shudder Original’s scary successes.
An intimate abortion drama set in France in 1963, when the procedure was illegal, Happening is a gruelling tale of predjudice and determination.
With the newly-streaming Bull, Neil Maskell is back doing what he does best. Except, as Carl Marsh observed, with even more violence.
Tony Hawk: Until The Wheels Fall Off is an intimate and honest portrait that chronicles Hawk’s bumpy rise to fame – from a scrawny Californian teen to the height of his powers.
The Cellar is an effective horror, held together by Elisha Cuthbert, that has some logic leaps but takes you along in its clammy grip.
A bizarre, true-life tale of espionage in World War II, Operation Mincemeat sees a talented cast of thespians adding weight to an incredibly devious plan.
All the characters in Slovenian film festival success Murina are richly drawn, and like the ocean itself there’s plenty going on beneath the surface
Much like the needle-in-a-haystack search that propels this unexpectedly endearing documentary, The Loneliest Whale: The Search For 52 begins as one thing and evolves into something altogether more meaningful.