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6938 film reviews available in total starting from 04/09/2002. Last updated on 26/04/2024. 750 film reviews inserted in the last 12 months.
LATEST
I See Red People by Bojina Panayotova
23/02/2018
BERLIN 2018: Bojina Panayotova investigates the past of her family in communist Bulgaria. A very creative documentary, which is as serious as it is amusing
When the Trees Fall by Marysia Nikitiuk
BERLIN 2018: Marysia Nikitiuk’s first film is intense and full of vitality, just like the life of a teenager
Touch Me Not by Adina Pintilie
BERLIN 2018: Adina Pintilie breaks new ground by playing with fiction and reality in her challenging first feature
The Seen and Unseen by Kamila Andini
22/02/2018
BERLIN 2018: Indonesian director Kamila Andini presents a fantastic tale about the metaphysical connection between a little girl and her terminally ill twin brother
My Brother's Name Is Robert and He Is an Idiot by Philip Gröning
BERLIN 2018: As long, irritating and meaningless as its title, the film screened by Philip Gröning in competition lost its audience before even being able to finish traumatising them with its ending
Becoming Astrid by Pernille Fischer Christensen
BERLIN 2018: Pernille Fischer Christensen dedicates a totally adorable and lively film to an important moment in the life of Astrid Lindgren, the creator of Pippi Longstocking
Genesis by Árpád Bogdán
21/02/2018
BERLIN 2018: Árpád Bogdán's new feature is a bold and striking film that immerses the viewer but struggles with the clarity of certain parts of its narrative
Yardie by Idris Elba
BERLIN 2018: The Wire star Idris Elba adapts Victor Headley’s cult novel for the big screen, showing promise that he’ll be as good behind the camera as he is in front of it
Game Girls by Alina Skrzeszewska
BERLIN 2018: Alina Skrzeszewska plunges into the miserable chaos of Skid Row, Los Angeles, in the wake of two women surviving in the “jungle”
L'Animale by Katharina Mückstein
BERLIN 2018: Katharina Mückstein’s second feature tackles the conflicts between who we are, how we want to be perceived, and how to free ourselves from social conventions
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