by Jamie Dunn, Ella Kemp
Highlights from across this year’s Berlinale, including a hallucinatory war thriller and a metaphysical farce.
by Ian Mantgani
The first lady of French cinema offers a final, typically fascinating self-portrait.
Sydney Pollack’s long-lost concert doc shows the Queen of Soul at the height of her pop fame.
by Ella Kemp
This portrait of the work of film critic Pauline Kael is a perfect reminder of why movies matter.
Diane Kruger and Martin Freeman star in this intriguing tale of espionage in modern-day Tehran.
Charles Ferguson’s mammoth chronicle of President Nixon’s downfall manages to be at once too detailed and too superficial.
Agnieszka Holland’s biopic of Welsh journalist Gareth Jones is one of the most powerful films at this year’s Berlinale.
American filmmaker Dan Sallitt delivers a delicate, subtly devastating portrait of friendship and depression.
by Lou Thomas
Casey Affleck directs this father-daughter survival drama set in a world without women.
This year’s Berlin Film Festival gets off to an inauspicious start care of Lone Sherfig’s fusty New York ensemble drama.
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