SALOUM: kinetic action horror with distinctly African flavour
Shudder's Saloum is a brisk, top-notch horror film from Senegal, laced with folklore that does not stint on character or political commentary.
Shudder's Saloum is a brisk, top-notch horror film from Senegal, laced with folklore that does not stint on character or political commentary.
The 101 Scariest Movie Moments Of All Time is well above the standard normally set by these countdown programmes.
Bold, baffling, and oh so beautiful, Jordan Peele's sci-fi-horror-western draws influence from a vasty array of cinematic sources.
In Where Is Anne Frank?, Ari Folman (Waltz With Bashir) asks us what might happen to Anne's imaginary friend Kitty in the latter-day real world.
While its runtime stretches the audience’s patience somewhat, Official Competition is largely successful in its meta-commentary on the nature of art and artists.
Solid and always watchable, Eiffel never quite reaches the Tower’s actual dramatic heights, and has a Sunday afternoon movie feel.
An American Gothic tale that mostly delivers, What Josiah Saw feels almost primaeval at times, and despite its flaws, haunts.
A beautifully observed road trip movie with heartbreak at its centre, Hit The Road – the debut feature of director Panah Panahi – resonates deeply.
Churning both the stomach and mind, The Feast is a lyrical and poetic Welsh film about history and responsibility, greed and the rape of the land.
Prolific Welsh filmmaker Jamie Adams has another music-based dramedy, Love Spreads, available to download now.
Daniel Draper's Manifesto is a blistering political call to arms that hits ever harder in the current corrupt climate, where a crisis in the Tory government is a daily/hourly occurrence.
British-Ghanian artist Larry Achimapong provides a sensory snapshot experience of Black culture and history, riddled with images of solitude and loneliness.