Sardines, trawlers and ‘sympathising a little bit with Hitler’: The agony of the press conference
Donald Clarke: At Cannes, be prepared for often humdrum occasions to turn into the most surreal and uncomfortable events
Latest articles about Lars von Trier
Donald Clarke: At Cannes, be prepared for often humdrum occasions to turn into the most surreal and uncomfortable events
Donald Clarke: Hollywood’s treating us like infants. And too many of us like it that way
The Danish director’s diagnosis with Parkinson’s disease adds new poignancy to the morbid humour
Films are once again being shown on big screens, as well as on Netflix and Disney+
Danish director of Another Round on creativity, destruction and temptation of money
The new indie comedy Saint Frances features period sex – cinema has travelled a long way
The actor has made a film about fathers – including her own, the Hollywood director Ron
The actor on her salty turn in Neasa Hardiman’s contagion-themed debut feature
The actor on staying in character and why starring in Emma is a rite of passage
The decade in culture: Arrival, Lady Bird, Get Out... But which movie is at number one?
Katy Davis from Clonskeagh in Dublin is starring alongside Edward Norton in a new noirish drama called Motherless Brooklyn
Why are audience members so eager to flee screenings of The Painted Bird?
Patrick Freyne: A bunch of cats in an alleyway is not remotely as magical as this film depicts
The Favourite was savage, Eighth Grade gave us hope, Apollo 11 was cool and magical
Dublin International Film Festival: Paul Duane’s What Time Is Death? charts Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty’s latest singular project
Actor, who was diagnosed with cancer, was a key figure in German cinema
Review: The director embraces all his worst instincts in this horrible film
The arch provocateur on his divisive film The House that Jack Built, misogyny and Björk
Toronto film festival: Natalie Portman dazzles in Vox Lux as Irish films continued to premiere at another busy Tiff for domestic cinema
Review: This biopic reminds us what a terrifying place American high school can be
Cannes diary: our film correspondent meets the controversial director and rounds up the rest of the news
There was plenty of Hollywood bling – and anger – at this year’s festival but new movies from Hirokazu Kore-eda and Ryusuke Hamaguchi were quieter highlights
Cannes diary: Protests against Gaza killings and racism also take centre stage
Cannes diary: Spike Lee’s black Klan comedy, Wim Wenders’s Papal pic and Lars von Trier’s latest outrage
Protests, Directors’ Fortnight and the race for the Palme d’Or
Despite a dispute with Netflix and films not being ready in time, the competition is one of the funkiest, least creaky in years
In conversation: Tara Erraught and Fergus Sheil
Programme flush with exciting talent but only three of 18 films competing for Palme d’Or have female directors
Kristin Scott Thomas on how French cinema has better roles for women, playing Churchill's wife – and Brexit
Patrick Freyne previews this year’s Christmas TV and gives away some plot twists
After just three weeks Noel Edmonds’s odd new show may be facing cancellation – and not because it’s cheap cheap cheap
Trey Shults dark, brilliant film about the suspicion of strangers gets us right inside the mind of the suspicious
Honorary Irishman was among the cleverest actors of his (or any other) generation
In later years his face developed creases like the famous ‘lived-in’ face of Samuel Beckett
Star of Pete’s Dragon Bryce Dallas Howard talks to Tara Brady about imaginary friends, goat poop and post-partum disorders
Nicolas Winding Refn’s feud with fellow Danish director Lars Von Trier shows no sign of letting up. “It is natural for youth to destroy the old”, he says
Jacques Audiard’s Dheepan’ wins Palme d’Or to gasps in the auditorium
It looks like a three-horse race led by Todd Haynes’s ‘Carol’, starring Cate Blanchett, and László Nemes’s ‘Son of Saul’. Could Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s stunningly beautiful ‘The Assassin’ sneak through to win?
Movies are becoming increasingly graphic in their depiction of sex. For actors, it means some very awkward days at the office
Before you read this, you’ll need to watch Adult Swim's latest viral sensation Too Many Cooks
Actress with throaty voice shot to fame in 1944 opposite future husband Humphrey Bogart
Charlotte Rampling has wandered the international cinema scene for a half a century, forever seeking challenges and shrugging off controversy. She talks about her new Irish film, an adaptation of John Banville’s ‘The Sea’, as well as projects both famous and notorious over the years
Two decades of collaboration with out-there Lars Von Trier has honed Stellan Skarsgård’s Swedish oddball persona to perfection – but deep down he’s really just an ordinary family man with a peculiar sort of career
Lars Von Trier continues on his highly eccentric way with this bold and bonkers epic
Cautious and couched, Emily Watson is an actor who exhibits reason and calm at every turn. So how did such a sober person find herself in such as dangerous business? “I was pretty bloody minded . . .”
"I wouldn’t consider myself a film buff, really,” says the Irish star of Game of Thrones as he talks about his hand-picked selection of classic 1970s flicks screening in Cork
Donald Clarke and Tara Brady cast eyes towards the coming year’s cinematic treats
Ever since The Sixth Sense, M Night Shyamalan has been known as ‘the scary twist ending guy’. But his new sci-fi adventure, After Earth, starring Will Smith and Jaden Smith, will change all that, says the irrepressibly cheery director
This year’s films have a lot of things going for them, but a cheery view of humanity is not one of them. Just look at Only God Forgives, A Touch of Sin, Inside Llewyn Davis . . .
Hollywood has been trying to get Brady Corbet onside for years, but he’s having none of it. “I was always passionate about movies, not about being in them,” says the star of Simon Killer
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Inquests into the nightclub fire that led to the deaths of 48 people
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices