THE FEAST: Welsh-language folk horror film serves chilling food for thought
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.
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.
August is not the prime month for sitting in a windowless room inside an entertainment complex for two to four hours of film. Which makes it all the more impressive that Keiron Self has found some timely content!
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.
July's film releases include an Irish drama about an impromptu baby adaption and a cartoon about Superman's dog.
British-Ghanian artist Larry Achimapong provides a sensory snapshot experience of Black culture and history, riddled with images of solitude and loneliness.
The terrible mass shooting in Port Arthur, Tasmania in 1996 created swift change in gun laws. Justin Kurzel’s immersive film Nitram details the life of the man behind that attack.
Everything Went Fine is a euthanasia drama that absorbs and moves, anchored by an excellent Sophie Marceau as a daughter coming to terms with her father’s desire to die.
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.
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.