50 scary films to watch at Halloween
Scare yourself silly with this list of everything from classic films to modern hits
Scare yourself silly with this list of everything from classic films to modern hits
Review: Johannes Nyholm’s unforgettable woodland reverie is grotesque and glorious
Can films inspire us as we navigate the limits of confinement via computers and phones?
Art house classics rub shoulders with Palme d’Or winners and critically acclaimed works
The Invisible Man is an absolute cracker: economic, disciplined and ingenious
Austrian auteur Jessica Hausner on her fifth feature, Little Joe, which she describes as a crossover between sci-fi and arthouse
Donald Clarke: Kids’ movies are becoming the only cinema many punters will pay to see
Great directors like Hitchcock and DeMille weren’t above having a second go at their own films
Review: Portman is the pop star from hell in this unrestrained fun ride
Some think she’s ‘a bit frightening’, including in Neil Jordan’s Greta, but the star couldn’t be nicer
Where can you watch the ceremony? When does it start and end? Who are the favourites?
Only four out of the top 100 films directed by women in BBC poll of critics
Toronto film festival: Natalie Portman dazzles in Vox Lux as Irish films continued to premiere at another busy Tiff for domestic cinema
The ‘Betty Blue’ actor on her love affair with Rupert Everett and why Jesus is sexy
Review: It’s a neat, effective entertainment with a a delicious response to the lead burglar’s assertion that the heroine is ‘only a woman’
It is 50 years since the 1968 Cannes film festival was called to a halt in solidarity with protesting students – but don’t expect commemorations
‘Breaking In’ star and producer talks about her new film, and the long road ahead to achieve fair representation
Review: The film is a long, slow Winnebago ride to a cold, cold grave
Xavier Legrand’s scintillating ‘Custody’ dramatises the horror of domestic violence
The documentary maker’s film about people taking piano exams may be his warmest yet
The season has been hijacked by celebrity chefs and lifestyle gurus but they can’t beat the taste of a real home
Julia Roberts and Owen Wilson wow in Wonder and James Franco hits gold in The Disaster Artist
Michael Haneke’s latest movie never quite gets started
`Everything I do is autobiographical,' says the film-maker, so what are we to make of 'mother!', the maddest movie of the year, which stars his psychologically tortured real-life girlfriend Jennifer Lawrence
Review: Tom Holland swings winningly through a flashy, punchy and heartwarming film
Cannes 2017: Michael Haneke’s latest carries a defiantly conventional setup followed by the director at his most unconventional and teasing best
Mexican director’s project one of several in the festival to address refugee crisis
Show goes on as Michael Haneke tipped for third Palme D’Or, for ‘Happy End’
Irish film ‘The Killing of a Sacred Deer’, starring Nicole Kidman and Colin Farrell, is one of the favourites for the Palme d’Or
Palme d’Or winner Cristian Mungiu returns to the theme of moral compromise, as a good doctor’s tries to help his daughter win a college scholarship
DJ Shrem and partner artist Les Cullinan’s home zings with colour and curiosities
Culture review 2016: The surge in Irish cinema continued with cracking diverse domestic films, and getting to see the Oscars in the flesh was a treat
Every now and then, the Cannes Film Festival’s top prize anticipates a movement
Thousands face immediate evacuation if Lille tribunal decides against them on Tuesday
Sixty years after she started as an actor, the star of ‘Hiroshima, Mon Amour’ and ‘Amour’ is still impressing audiences
Birds of little brain still manage to fly fairly high in funny sequel
Human catastrophe has always loomed large in Dardenne movies, but now, after decades of onscreen misery, the Belgian brothers are begining to let in a little light
Woe betide any movie director who gets into Dylan Moran’s black books
Diana star Naomi Watts is feeling the pressure like never before – even for a two-time Oscar nominee, the intensity of the response to the movie is something new. “There is a huge amount of responsibility,” she says. “I am a little bit scared by it”
It took John Banville three years to write a book, and three days to turn it into his first film script. Money for jam, or beginner’s luck?
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
Spain’s greatest living director tells Donald Clarke about the contemporary inspiration for his subversively light new comedy
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