Saoirse Ronan

Check out this delightful footage from the set of Lady Bird

By Adam Woodward

Watch Greta Gerwig direct a young love scene between Saoirse Ronan and Lucas Hedges.

On Chesil Beach

By David Jenkins

Marital woe plagues a young couple honeymooning on the Dorset coast in this Ian McEwan adaptation.

review

25 new films by female directors you need to see in 2018

By Shane O’Reilly

Start getting excited for new works from Amma Asante, Marielle Heller and Mia Hansen-Løve.

What’s the key ingredient at this year’s Oscars? Eggs, of course

By Emma Fraser

This breakfast staple features in five out of the nine Best Picture nominees at the 90th Academy Awards.

‘Dear Mum…’ Letters inspired by Lady Bird

By Little White Lies

Four female writers pen personal messages to their mothers in response to Greta Gerwig’s affecting film.

Lady Bird

By Sophie Monks Kaufman

Saoirse Ronan experiences growing pains in Sacramento in Greta Gerwig’s delightful indie comedy.

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Greta Gerwig: ‘I like the process of how a film becomes owned by different people’

By David Jenkins

The Lady Bird director espouses filmmaking as a team game and writing scripts inspired by personal memory.

In Lady Bird, Timothée Chalamet is not your typical dirtbag boyfriend

By Claire Biddles

Greta Gerwig’s non-judgemental approach makes Lady Bird’s relationship with Kyle so relatable.

60 films to look forward to in 2018 – part 2

By Joe Boden

The latest offerings from Claire Denis, Steve McQueen and Harmony Korine complete our bumper 2018 preview.

Lady Bird – first look review

By Sophie Monks Kaufman

Saoirse Ronan whirlwinds her way through Greta Gerwig’s sublime directorial debut.

Greta Gerwig’s Lady Bird gets a glorious official trailer

By Little White Lies

Saoirse Ronan faces a quarter-life crisis in this semi-autobiographical debut.

The Grand Budapest Hotel

By David Jenkins

Wes Anderson returns with an opulent and strangely moving caper movie.

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Byzantium

By Anton Bitel

Bloodsuckers hit the beach in Neil Jordan’s woozy and extremely violent British noir.

review

Hanna

By Adam Woodward

Any intrigue established in Hanna is smothered by a director unable to overcome his own art house ambitions.

review

Atonement

By Lorien Haynes

Joe Wright’s World War Two weepie is a near masterpiece that only lacks the substance of great performances.

review

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About Little White Lies

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.

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