Dear Orson Welles & Other Essays by Mark Cousins: A generous, playful and unpretentious collection
The self-confessed ‘altar boy in the church of cinema’ propels the reader comfortably from one argument to the next
The self-confessed ‘altar boy in the church of cinema’ propels the reader comfortably from one argument to the next
In this series, Rosita Boland visits places in Ireland where films were made, and assesses the legacy they left behind
Sight and Sound’s influential list of the 100 greatest films of all time is voted on by more than 1,600 professionals around the world
Mark Rylance on his unlikely road to Hollywood stardom, and why Brits love an underdog
Donald Clarke: The mellifluous Poitier didn’t just break down barriers, he was also of the great movie stars
Oscar-nominated film-maker’s many credits include What’s Up, Doc? and Paper Moon
Joel Coen delivers an expressionist version of the often-filmed drama
The celebrated photographer’s new book chronicles the city of 60 years ago
Review: Steven Spielberg revives Bernstein and Sondheim’s classic musical for the screen
A complex formula involving several variables dictates whether the word is appropriate
Donald Clarke: Rating what movie is best is fun, but a waste of intellectual energy
American actor reflects on growing up with famous dinner guests in Ireland and Rome
It was also the one where Chadwick Boseman didn’t win. The one with the miscalculated finale
David Puttnam recalls series of accidents that helped make Chariots of Fire a classic
Mank, David Fincher’s new film, goes some way to rehabilitating the film star's reputation
Including Mank, The Prom, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, The Midnight Sky and Bridgerton
There’s been another major turnover but catch the classics while you can
Paris Letter: Performer sang of her beloved city, of amour, rebellion and fleeting pleasures
The Countdown lexicographer on a life-long love of languages, accidental fame and why ‘gobshite’ isn’t as Irish as we think
Review: Mark Cousins’s epic documentary is a lengthy journey worth making more than once
Let the Riverdancer release his ‘vanity project’ Blackbird and silence the Twitter haters
For some millennials, playing the PC game allows them to live the lives they can only dream about - but its success over two decades is about more than that
Half our favourite movies have vanished. But there’s still plenty of great stuff to search for
The best biopics, documentaries, cartoons, features and award favourites of the year
The Decade in Culture: As we move into the roaring twenties many things remain the same about the seventh art
‘Gay found the pulse of his country and kept his finger firmly placed there’
An Irishman’s Diary: He laments ‘the terrible conditions now existing in Ireland’
Review: Not since Monty Python has a period Frenchman been as absurd as Robert Pattinson
Critic Mark Cousins takes a personal look at North’s relationship with cinema for Channel 4
Donald Clarke: A new print of A Clockwork Orange is on the way – get your boots on
Interview: The once reticent star on becoming one of Donald Trump’s most vocal critics
Democrats too quickly saw the leakage of allies as the beginning of the end for the US leader
‘The Other Side of the Wind’ is just part of the Orson Welles flotilla docked at Netflix Cove
House of Cards, new Coen Brothers movie, and a double bill of Orson Welles
Unfinished ‘The Other Side of the Wind’, starring John Huston, picked up by Netflix
Review: Those who engage with the Cousinian vowels will find much to savour
It’s simple to sum up the subversive new Mercedes-Benz C63S AMG estate: unbeatable
The Favourite from Yorgos Lanthimos will compete for the Golden Lion at Venice and John Butler’s Papi Chulo will premiere at Toronto
Cannes diary: Competitive von Trier outrage and debating the meaning of shoes
Despite a dispute with Netflix and films not being ready in time, the competition is one of the funkiest, least creaky in years
Programme flush with exciting talent but only three of 18 films competing for Palme d’Or have female directors
Netflix, now a film-maker, has released a series of weak science-fiction movies
Playwright and film maker on his new ‘feminist’ movie Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Web Log: PublicDomainMovie.net is a treasure trove for fans of Hollywood past
Kerry may have been the measure of Dublin's new world but Mayo won't leave it
And what is the mystery behind “Rebecca Blunt”, the unknown talent who has written his latest film?
Paris Letter: France mourns Jeanne Moreau, an actor of fierce intelligence
Obituary: Peter Sallis. Born February 1st 1921; died June 2nd, 2017
In her first interview in her new role, Selina Cartmell, only the fourth artistic director in the Gate's 90-year history, discusses her plans for the theatre's future
2016 Revisited: The Roses' job is to float around smiling and wearing a sash, which resembles a bandolier
While some movies have vanished from the streaming service, many have arrived and there are plenty to fill the summer evenings, from comedy classics like ‘Airplane’ to thrillers such as ‘Winter’s Bone’
American actor Peter Macon is playing Othello for the fourth time in the Abbey’s new production, and his love-hate relationship with the ‘problematic material’ is what keeps him coming back
Actor and biographer Simon Callow to introduce last significant work from auteur
A fascination with Europe as a ritual cultural entity is reflected in these paintings from 1980 onward
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