Issue 112 - Father Mother Sister Brother | Little White Lies

Issue 112: The Father Mother Sister Brother issue – Out now!

Issue 112

There are very few filmmakers who are as passionate and invested in their craft as Jim Jarmusch. He cemented his icon status early with his second feature, Stranger Than Paradise (1984), which still retains its benchmark as being a film that, decades later, has lost not a scintilla of its cool credo. We’re now deep into his fifth decade at the vanguard of his unique project, as an image maker of rare singularity, but also as a musician, a painter and a poet – creative side-hustles that all find an outlet in his extraordinary feature films. 

His new work, Father Mother Sister Brother, takes the form of three short, intertwining dramas that offer a tender and detailed discussion of what it means to have parents, and what it means to be the child of parents. So pretty universal stuff… Yet Jarmusch is not really interested in fortune cookie truisms, and instead builds out the authenticity and the emotion in these small scenes so truth and recognition can emerge organically. 

In the first short, Father, we see Adam Driver and Mayim Bialik taking time out from busy domestic and work lives to visit their shambling old pops (Tom Waits), in his house at the end of a dirt road, and it’s hard to know who’s more nervous about the meeting. Then, a stunted tea party takes place in a plush Dublin stack, hosted by a bestselling author (Charlotte Rampling), and attended by her two odd daughters (Cate Blanchett and Vicky Krieps). Finally, we cruise the streets of Paris with brother (Luka Sabbat) and sister (Indya Moore) as they head to their parents’ apartment to pack up their affairs following their untimely death. Jarmusch builds in subtle threads between the three disparate dramas to emphasise the connectivity of people and places, while also demonstrating his wizard-like skill in bringing a lyrical coherence to the film as a whole. 

Inside the issue, we celebrate Jarmusch and his craft, while also offering a fully-illustrated dossier looking back at every one of his sublime fiction features with new, music-themed illustrations for each one. 

On the cover...

Yannik Saal is the Berlin-based illustrator who created the jigsaw-like cover for this issue, which emphasises the graphic novel-like vignette structure of the film, but also the vibrant beauty at the core of its stories. Usually, we have a single portrait on the cover of a film’s most prominent figure, but this time we’ve opted to include all eight of the key protagonists of Father Mother Sister Brother for your delectation.

We have amazing new illustrations in the issue from Eri Aikawa, Racheal Bruce, Simone Goder, Hazel Mason, Michelle Urra, Stéphanie Sergeant, Berta Vallo and Reena Wu.

Inside this issue

Lead review

Father Mother Sister Brother

Blake Simons draws out the delicate nuance and bittersweet insights of Jim Jarmusch’s superlative family saga.

Essay

Song & Dance Man

Claire Biddles profiles filmmaker Jim Jarmusch, but through the prism of his guise as a music maker.

Essay

Ghost Company

Pinpointing the spectral aspect that comes naturally from acting in a Jim Jarmusch movie.

Interview

The Jarmusch Look: Catherine George

The costume designer talks working with Saint Laurent and attaining the Jarmusch sartorial vision.

Interview

The Jarmusch Look: Frederick Elmes

We chat to the cinematographer who has collaborations with Lynch, Scorsese and, of course, Jarmusch on his CV.

Essay Series

Jukebox: A Jim Jarmusch Dossier

New essays and 7”-inspired illustrations on every one of Jim Jarmusch’s iconic fiction features. Writers on the roster: Mark Asch, Brianna Zigler, Leonardo Goi, Lucy Peters, Willow Catelyn Maclay, Kambole Campbell, Clarisse Loughrey, David Jenkins, Jake Cole, Carol Grant, Jourdain Searles and Isaac Feldberg.

In the back section

Interview

Mark Jenkin

Mark Jenkin gets down to brass tacks on shooting his experimental sea-faring epic, Rose of Nevada, with Sophie Monks Kaufman.

Interview

Bi Gan

Bi Gan talks about the co-mingling of cinema and dreams in his jaw-dropping third feature, Resurrection, with Kambole Campbell.

Interview

Mascha Schilinski

Mascha Schilinski explains how photography keyed into the ideas and structure of her challenging film, Sound of Falling, with Lillian Crawford.

Interview

Benjamin Voisin

Benjamin Voisin, the lead actor of François Ozon’s adaptation of Albert Camus’ The Stranger, chats to Hannah Strong about taking on one of the toughest roles in all of literature.

Column

Home Ents

Arrow’s releases of Hard Boiled and The Day of the Locust, Indicator's release of The Grapes of Death, Transmission's release of Special Effects, Third Window's release of New Directors from Japan: Takashi Ono, Criterion's release of The Blade, Radiance's release of Matador, BFI's release of Negatives

Also in the issue...

Vadim Rizov unearths gems at the 2026 International Film Festival Rotterdam, David Jenkins witnessed the further implosion of the once-great Berlin International Film Festival, and Marina Ashioti celebrates trash deep cut Elevator Girls in Bondage in her Sticky Gold Stars Column.

In review

Mark Jenkin’s Rose of Nevada

Lee Sang-Il’s Kokuho

Ian Forsythe and Jane Pollard’s Broken English

Paolo Sorrentino’s La Grazia

Gus Van Sant’s Dead Man’s Wire

Ragnhild Enkner’s Ultras

Mascha Schilinski’s Sound of Falling

Julia Loktev’s My Undesirable Friends: Part 1 – Last Air in Moscow

Genki Kawamura’s Exit 8

Christopher Petit and Emma Matthews’ D is for Distance

James McAvoy’s California Schemin’

Olivier Assayas’s The Wizard of the Kremlin

Ugo Bienvenu’s Arco

Gabriel Mascaro’s The Blue Trail

Ido Fluk’s Köln 75

François Ozon’s The Stranger

Sergei Loznitsa’s Two Prosecutors

Orban Wallace’s Our Land

Chris Lord and Phil Miller’s Project Hail Mary

Bi Gan’s Resurrection

Raoul Peck’s Orwell: 2+2=5

Gianfranco Rosi’s Pompei: Below the Clouds

About the Magazine

Little White Lies was established in 2005 as a bi-monthly print magazine committed to championing great movies  and the talented people who make them. Combining cutting-edge design,  illustration and journalism, we’ve been described as being “at the vanguard of the independent publishing movement.” 

Our reviews feature a unique tripartite ranking system that captures the different aspects of the movie-going experience. 

We believe in Truth & Movies.

You can buy and subscribe to the print magazine online.

Digital Editions

Want to read LWLies on the go? Live in the remote reaches of the world and  can’t afford postage for a physical subscription? Fancy a back catalogue to all our digital editions? Little White Lies is available in digital  format via several platforms!

Accessibility Settings

Text

Applies the Open Dyslexic font, designed to improve readability for individuals with dyslexia.

Applies a more readable font throughout the website, improving readability.

Underlines links throughout the website, making them easier to distinguish.

Adjusts the font size for improved readability.

Visuals

Reduces animations and disables autoplaying videos across the website, reducing distractions and improving focus.

Reduces the colour saturation throughout the website to create a more soothing visual experience.

Increases the contrast of elements on the website, making text and interface elements easier to distinguish.