Περιεχόμενα
The Last DetailStanley Kubrick. By Rick Poynor.
Fear and Desire. By Christina Newland.
A Matter of Life and Debt. By Philip Concannon.
The Lives of Others. By Simran Hans.
Sons and Daughters of the Jianghu. By Tony Rayns.
Rough Justice. By Nick Pinkerton.
The S&S interview: Koreeda Hirokazu. Interview by Alexander Jacoby.
Regulars
Editorial
Streaming the house down
Rushes
On our Radar
Websites about title design, plus what to visit, buy, read, stream and listen to.
Love and friendship
Wanuri Kahiu's widely praised Rafiki is part of a wave of films representing the complex realities of gay life in Africa. By Lizelle Bisschoff.
Dream palaces: the Nivki, Kiev
The Ukrainian director of A Gentle Creature and Donbass recalls a whimsical moment of truancy as a young student and a hair-raising encounter with Kiev's Soviet-era authorities during a trip to watch an 'erotic' movie. By Sergei Loznitsa.
Body and soul
A Deal with the Universe is a tender documentary about pregnancy - with the difference that its director and subject is a trans man. By Cathy Brennan.
The numbers: Capernaum
Nadine Labaki's film received a warm welcome from audiences in spite of the heat, the latest success in a sector undergoing major flux. By Charles Gant.
Films in production
New projects for Charles Burnett, Lucrecia Martel, Spike Le, Steve Spielberg and Rachel Weisz.
Wide angle
Our Wide Angle section
J.G. Ballard: Hooked to the silver screen
It is no coincidence that one of the great prophets of the human condition in the digital age was also the writer most attuned to cinema. By Chris Hall.
Primal screen: My brilliant career
Her brief career in British film, as one of Hitchcock's leading ladies, has distracted attention from Anny Ondra's versatility and longevity. By Pamela Hutchinson.
Exhibition: Out of the shadows
Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollen are best known for their films and writings, but their groundbreaking artworks deserve more attention. By Oliver Fuke and Nicolas Helm-Grovas.
Reviews
Films of the month
Loro
The Sisters Brothers
Wild Rose
Home Cinema features
Our Home Cinema section
Television
Books
Liberating Hollywood: Women Directors and the Feminist Reform of 1970s American Cinema by Maya Monta?ez Smukler (Rutgers University Press) reviewed by Isabel Stevens
The Wild Bunch: Sam Peckinpah, a Revolution in Hollywood, and the Making of a Legendary Film by W.K. Stratton (Bloomsbury) reviewed by Tom Charity
Letters
Endings
Le Jour se Leve
The final dramatic moments of Marcel Carne's classic work of poetic realism see the dreams of its doomed protagonist shot to pieces. By Fintan McDonagh.
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