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Stephanie Bunbury
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‘Paddington In Peru’ Review: Olivia Colman & Antonio Banderas Join Threequel As Continued Story Of The Little Bear Welcomed By Strangers Remains Magical
Olivia Colman plays a singing nun. I'm almost prepared to say that's all you need to know about Paddington in Peru: that Olivia Colman, living English treasure, gets her Julie Andrews on and leads a song-and-dance sequence on an alpine meadow that tells us that the hills are still very much alive. It's…
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2 Comments Comment on ‘Paddington In Peru’ Review: Olivia Colman & Antonio Banderas Join Threequel As Continued Story Of The Little Bear Welcomed By Strangers Remains Magical
‘Four Mothers’ Review: Slight But Charming Irish Comedy Treats Family Heartache With Tenderness – London Film Festival
There is always space, it seems, for another warm-hearted story about the foibles of Irish working-class women, cosy as a fireside chat with a nice cup of tea. As for gay men and their mams, that's a rich seam of drama, comedy and whatever lies in between that is probably inexhaustible. The four mothers…
‘The Summer Book’ Review: Glenn Close Stars In Gentle Story Of Bereavement, Parenting & The Healing Power Of Nature – London Film Festival
At one point in The Summer Book, Charlie McDowell's infinitely gentle adaptation of Tove Jansson's novel about a small girl, her father and grandmother spending the short Finnish summer on one of the country's thousands of islands, nine-year-old Sophia looks at a tapestry on the wall showing a rampant…
‘Last Breath’ Review: Costa-Gavras’ End-Of-Life Drama Is Softly Reflective And Profoundly Moving – San Sebastian Film Festival
Costa-Gavras' single hyphenated trade name has been synonymous with political thrillers since Z shot from the starting gates in 1969 to win two Oscars and bring the world's attention to the machinations of the military junta then ruling Greece. Among the numerous films he has made over the ensuing…
‘Modi – Three Days On The Wing Of Madness’ Review: Punk Rock Lives In Johnny Depp’s Riotous Celebration Of Artistic Excess – San Sebastian
Johnny Depp's bohemian fantasy Modi – Three Days on the Wing of Madness starts at full throttle, with the artist Amelio Modigliani (Riccardo Scamarcio) breaking up the Café Dome, then exiting on a trolley straight through their stained-glass window, smashing the Art Nouveau rosebuds to bits while still…
‘In Her Place’ Review: Chile’s Oscar Entry Is A Delightfully Skittish Take On A Strange But True Crime Story – San Sebastian Film Festival
Dames, right? It's the quiet ones you have to watch, although the more flamboyant also require a vigilant eye, especially if said dame is packing a pistol. Mercedes (Elisa Zulueta) is the self-effacing secretary to a senior judge in Santiago, Chile; Maria Carolina Geel (Francisca Lewin) is a murderer. The…
‘When Fall Is Coming’ Review: François Ozon’s Charming Family Drama Is A Matter Of Life And Death – San Sebastian Film Festival
Some people are just better off dead. That's the ultimate conclusion of the prolific French filmmaker François Ozon's new domestic drama When Fall Is Coming, receiving its world premiere at the San Sebastian Film Festival this week, but delivered with such sly delicacy, such slippery grace — no, actually…
‘Emmanuelle’ Review: Audrey Diwan’s Brave Attempt To Revive A Dated Softcore Classic Leaves A Lot To Be Desired – San Sebastian Film Festival
It’s a surprise to find out that director Audrey Diwan had never seen the original Emmanuelle — a gauzy soft-porn feature that got la toute France hot and bothered when it was allowed to be shown in normal cinemas in 1974 — before she was approached to do this remake, which opens the San Sebastian Film Fes…
Venice Film Festival 2024: All Of Deadline’s Movie Reviews
The 2024 Venice Film Festival kicked off August 28 with the long-awaited Tim Burton-Michael Keaton sequel Beetlejuice Beetlejuice opening the 81th edition, which runs through September 7 on the Lido. Deadline is on the ground to watch all the key films.
The lineup for the world’s oldest fest also…
‘Horizon: An American Saga – Chapter 2’ Review: Kevin Costner’s Homage To Westerns Is Visually Impressive, But The Story Doesn’t Come Together — Venice Film Festival
Just a few months after the first three-hour installment of Kevin Costner’s legacy project had its lackluster premiere at Cannes, his second slab of Western fudge has launched in Venice. There are more snow-topped mountains in Montana, more bars bathed in golden gaslight, more shoot-outs, more lines of…
‘Love’ Review: Dag Johan Haugerud Makes An Entirely Believable Film About Decent People, Everyday Life And … Love – Venice Film Festival
Sex is never just sex, says Bjorn (Lars Jacob Holm), a middle-aged psychologist Tor (Tayo Cittadella Jacobsen) meets on the ferry between central Oslo and Nakholmen, the island where they happen to have neighboring houses. Tor, a nurse who works with cancer patients, looks sceptical.
Tor has had a…
‘Youth: Homecoming’ Review: Director Wang Bing Shines A Light On Workers Whose Lives Nobody Would Want — Venice Film Festival
Fiercely independent Chinese filmmaker Wang Bing spent five years filming young workers in Zhili, an industrial region near Shanghai where around 18,000 garment workshops churn out cheap clothes for the domestic market. The workshops run on cheap labor from the provinces; around 200,000 make the long trek…
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