Saturday, 21 March 2026

Stage: A question of faith

Where There Is No Time
by Mohammedally Hashemi
director Hamza Ali
with Mohammedally Hashemi, Milly Zero, Kerena Jagpal
Seven Dials Playhouse, London • 17-28.Mar.26
★★★

Packed with big ideas, this one-hour drama keeps the audience engaged as we consider moral questions in the context of global culture. The writing is smart and understated, but it's also underpowered, and it becomes opaque due to stagey flourishes and barbed performances. As a result, the three characters are intriguingly prickly but never very likeable, especially with their oversized melodramatic mood swings.

It's set in an atelier in London, where Yemeni-Iranian designer Yusuf (played by writer Mohammedally Hashemi) is preparing his new show with his best friend and muse Nina (Kerena Jagpal). She encourages him to embrace the political edge in his work, and wants him to make a bold statement with his Dress of Faith, which was designed by his late mother, who inspired him to embrace his art and heritage. But the show is being funded by businesswoman Susann (Milly Zero), who wants Yusuf to be more accessible and commercial. She also loathes Nina, and their clash threatens the whole collection.

Essentially, this is a fresh take on the idea of killing your darlings, letting your friends and most beloved ideas go in order to find both artistic and popular success. So the jagged discussions ripple with resonant topicality, given extra weight by the Middle Eastern background, even if everything feels a little too sharply pointed. Each character has a moment when they hit the wall, burning bridges with screaming fury that feels unearned by the characterisations. This leaves the strongly charismatic actors looking arch as their glances throw razor-sharp daggers at each other. Without even a hint of camp humour, this is played with relentless, deadly seriousness.

In an attempt to add cinematic flourishes, the show is staged with jangling musical stings at the moment each character enters or exits, whether or not there's any passage of time. And a swirly time-lapse segment adds similarly distracting flashing lights. These are clearly meant to signify visual edits, but they continually throw us out of the scene. That said, it does add an eye-catching sense of drama to the interaction. And the bigger themes emerge with a real kick.

For information,
SEVEN DIALS > 
photo by Tariq Westcarr • 19.Mar.26

Friday, 20 March 2026

BFI Flare: Let your light shine

The 40th BFI Flare kicked off on Wednesday night with a lively world premiere for Hunky Jesus at BFI Southbank, attended by many of the cast and crew, including several of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, who ceremoniously conferred sainthood on the film's director on-stage. This was followed by a terrific party, as always running very late on a school night! And now the festival is up and running at full speed. This is my 30th year covering this event, and here is the first handful of notes about films I'm watching (Critical Week is below)...

Hunky Jesus
dir-scr Jennifer M Kroot; with Sister Roma, Sister Vish Knew 26/US ****
Recounting the story of San Francisco's iconic Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, this documentary is hugely entertaining on a variety of levels. Aside from being riotously funny and drenched in vibrant colours and joyous sunshine, the film is also remarkably informative as it both chronicles the sisters' history and explores their approach to life. Even more important is the way filmmaker Jennifer Kroot provides a series of pointed kicks.

Maspalomas
dir Aitor Arregi, Jose Mari Goenaga; with Jose Ramon Soroiz, Nagore Aranburu 25/Sp ****
With a pointed premise that's rarely depicted on screen, this Basque drama continually catches our attention with honest drama and realistic emotions surrounding an older gay man. Filmmakers Aitor Arregi and Jose Mari Goenaga take a superbly offhanded approach to the narrative and characters. Shot in an almost documentary style, the film relies more on unspoken interaction than dialog, which encourages the audience to engage more deeply.

10s Across the Borders
dir Chan Sze-Wei; with Xyza Pinklady Mizrahi, Teddy Oricci 25/Ph ****
Covering the Philippines, Malaysia and Thailand, this documentary captures the exuberant spark of queer young people who find a sense of belonging at voguing balls, carrying on the iconic New York tradition. Using fly-on-the-wall camerawork, filmmaker Chan Sze-Wei allows these bright stars to reveal their hopes and aspirations in conversation with each other. Their big personalities come through in everything they do, especially when they're striking provocative poses.

Uchronia
dir Fil Ieropoulos; with Kristof Lamp, Flomaria Papadaki 26/GR ***
Inspired by Arthur Rimbaud's poem A Season in Hell, experimental Greek filmmakers Fil Ieropoulos and Foivos Dousos take an outrageously surreal look at queer identity and legacy. Their multi-lingual approach inventively mixes documentary and drama, using a kaleidoscopic range of film clips. It's a bold film that continually takes jabs at how society pushes damaging ideas while compromising and commodifying messages. It's a hypnotic philosophical romp through history.

Full reviews will be linked to the SHADOWS @ BFI FLARE page.

~~~~~~~ ~~ ~~~ ~~~~
C R I T I C A L  W E E K

Watching Oscars live in London on Sunday night, I enjoyed the show for the most part, even if it lacked the surprises I always love. At least there was a very rare tie (for live-action short). Michael B Jordan was a worthy winner, the largest cheer of the night, while Jessie Buckley gave far and away the best speech. And it was great to see Autumn Durald Arkapaw claim a trophy. Conan O'Brien was a funny but uneven host. Some gags were inspired, others felt corny. Reunions are fun: those Bridesmaids girls are hilarious, and it was lovely to see Nicole Kidman and Ewan McGregor mark 25 years since Moulin Rouge. On the other hand Avengers Robert Downey Jr and Chris Evans were less fun. Highlights were the two big musical moments, with the dazzling Sinners extravaganza and a Golden K-pop moment. The extended in memorium segment went on a bit, but reminded us of the huge figures we lost last year. 

As for movies, I watched Aneurin Barnard and Jeremy Piven in the uneven thriller Past Life, the warm and scrappy five-strand Irish drama Abode, Christian Petzold's gorgeous German drama Mirrors No 3 starring Paula beer, the gorgeous and inventive Marianne Faithfull doc Broken English, and two excellent docs that were up for Oscars: Iran's moving Cutting Through Rocks and the blood-boiling The Alabama Solution. There was also a live performance of the drama Where There Is No Time at Seven Dials Theatre.

Coming up this next week, I'll be watching Zazie Beetz in They Will Kill You, Jude Law in The Wizard of the Kremlin, Miriam Margolyes in Holy Days, Gianfranco Rosi's Pompei: Below the Clouds, and the premiere of Riz Ahmed's new TV series Bait. Plus of course quite a lot more movies at BFI Flare.



Saturday, 14 March 2026

Out on a Limb: Oscar picks & predictions

This has been considered one of the most volatile awards seasons in memory, as the buzz has been continually shifting around who might be in line to take home Oscars. There are a couple of sure things for the 98th Academy Awards on Sunday night, but the most important precursors -- Bafta, PGA, SAG -- didn't agree in many categories. Watching the ceremony, I always love an upset, so those will get my loudest cheers. Here's who I think will, should and could win [with winners in bold after the fact]...

PICTURE
Will/should win: Sinners
Could win: One Battle After Another

INTERNATIONAL FEATURE
Will win: Sentimental Value
Could win: It Was Just an Accident
Should win: Sirat
Dark horse: The Secret Agent

ANIMATED FEATURE
Will/should win: KPop Demon Hunters
Could win: Zootopia 2

DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
Will win: The Perfect Neighbor
Could win: Mr Nobody Against Putin
Should Win: Come See Me in the Good Light
Dark horse: The Alabama Solution

ACTRESS
Will/should win: Jessie Buckley - Hamnet

ACTOR
Will/should win: Michael B Jordan - Sinners
Could win: Timothee Chalamet - Marty Supreme
Dark horses: Ethan Hawke - Blue Moon / Wagner Moura - The Secret Agent

SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Will/should win: Amy Madigan - Weapons
Could win: Teyana Taylor - One Battle After Another 

SUPPORTING ACTOR
Will win: Sean Penn - One Battle After Another 
Could win: Delroy Lindo - Sinners 
Should win: Stellan Skarsgard - Sentimental Value  

DIRECTOR
Will win: Paul Thomas Anderson - One Battle After Another
Could/should win: Ryan Coogler - Sinners

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Will win: One Battle After Another - Paul Thomas Anderson
Could/should win: Hamnet - Chloe Zhao & Maggie O'Farrell

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Will/should win: Sinners - Ryan Coogler
Could win: Sentimental Value - Joachim Trier & Eskil Vogt

CASTING
Will win: Sinners - Francine Maisler
Could/should win: The Secret Agent - Gabriel Domingues
[Winner: One Battle After Another - Cassandra Kulukundis]

ORIGINAL SCORE
Will win: Sinners - Ludwig Goransson
Could win: One Battle After Another - Jonny Greenwood
Should win: Hamnet - Max Richter

ORIGINAL SONG
Will/should win: Golden - KPop Demon Hunters - Ejae, Mark Sonnenblick, Joong Gyu Kwak, Yu Han Lee, Hee Dong Nam, Jeong Hoon Seo, Teddy Park

CINEMATOGRAPHY
Will win: One Battle After Another - Michael Bauman
Should win: Sinners - Autumn Durald Arkapaw

FILM EDITING
Will win: Sinners - Michael Shawver
Could/should win: One Battle After Another - Andy Jurgensen

PRODUCTION DESIGN
Will/should win: Frankenstein - Tamara Deverell, Shane Vieau

COSTUME DESIGN
Will win: Frankenstein - Kate Hawley
Should win: Sinners - Ruth E Carter

MAKEUP & HAIRSTYLING
Will win: Frankenstein - Mike Hill, Jordan Samuel, Cliona Furey
Should win: Kokuho - Kyoko Toyokawa, Naomi Hibino, Tadashi Nishimatsu

VISUAL EFFECTS
Will/should win: Avatar: Fire and Ash - Joe Letteri, Richard Baneham, Eric Saindon, Daniel Barrett

SOUND
Will win: Sinners - Chris Welcker, Benjamin A Burtt, Felipe Pacheco, Brandon Proctor, Steve Boeddeker
Could win: F1 - Gareth John, Al Nelson, Gwendolyn Yates Whittle, Gary A Rizzo, Juan Peralta
Should win: Sirat - Amanda Villavieja, Laia Casanovas, Yasmina Praderas


Thursday, 12 March 2026

Critical Week: Made for each other

Finally, we reach Oscar weekend after what has felt like an unusually long awards season. My predictions will be here on Saturday as always. Jesse Buckley looks like a sure thing to win Best Actress for Hamnet, and she has a very different film in cinemas right now, which I caught up on the day it opened: The Bride! is Maggie Gyllenhaal's ambitious reimagining of The Bride of Frankenstein, costarring Christian Bale, Annette Bening and Penelope Cruz. It's enjoyably outrageous, but also badly uneven. Screening this week just before it opens, Reminders of Him is a slushy romantic drama with Maika Monroe and Tyriq Withers that lays on the sentimentality rather thickly. And the story is too simple to carry the emotional weight. But it looks great.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Everybody to Kenmure Street
The Love That Remains • Scarlet
PERHAPS AVOID:
How to Make a Killing
Reminders of Him
ALL REVIEWS >
Further afield, I caught up with Steven Soderbergh's The Christophers, a smart and thoughtful art-world comedy-drama with excellent roles for Ian McKellen and Michaela Coel. Callum Scott Howells has fun chewing the scenery in the eye-catching Madfabulous, an involving and surprisingly moving tale based on a true story from the British aristocracy. And then there was Ferzan Ozpetek's lavishly gorgeous Diamonds, an involving multi-strand love letter to 1970s Italian costume designers. I also saw six movies in the Cinema Made in Italy season at BFI Southbank. 

Outside the theatre, I had a couple of Project Hail Mary experiences: After briefly meeting Ryan Gosling and directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller in London, I took a wonderful trip to the Pinewood Studios Creature Shop, where I got to meet Ryan's on-screen alien buddy Rocky, his vocal and puppet performer James Ortiz and creature maestro Neal Scanlan (full report with pics to come). Finally, there was also a live performance of Sam Morrison's witty one-man show Sugar Daddy at Underbelly Boulevard. It's basically about grief, but he's a gifted comic and he makes it very, very funny too.

Coming up this next week, I'll be watching Aneurin Barnard in Past Life, Irish drama Abode, German drama Miroirs No 3, the Marianne Faithfull doc Broken English, staying up all night to see the Oscars on Sunday night and watching lots of movies as part of the 40th BFI Flare film fest, which kicks off Wednesday on the Southbank with a documentary called Hunky Jesus. I'll also see a live performance of Where There Is No Time at Seven Dials Theatre.

Monday, 9 March 2026

A season of Italian films...

Over five days, a flurry of acclaimed films were specially screened at BFI Southbank as part of Cinema Made in Italy in London, sponsored by the British Film Institute and Rome's Cinecittà studios. I caught six of the films, and I spoke with two of my long-time favourites: actor-filmmaker Valeria Golino and director Isabel Coixet (interviews to come). There was a clear focus this year on women's stories, which provided a superb point of view to a variety of powerful stories. Here are notes on the films I watched...

La Gioia [aka Joy]
dir Nicolangelo Gelormini; with Valeria Golino, Saul Nanni 25/It ***.
Brisk and involving, this Italian drama pulls us in with characters who have vivid internal lives, including yearnings for companionship that are easy to identify with. At the centre, this is the story of a complex relationship, and director Nicolangelo Gelormini inventively depicts how it awakens the heart of a woman who had given up hope for herself. This is a dark, multi-layered story full of ideas that get deep under the skin.

The Last One for the Road [Le Città di Pianura]
dir Francesco Sossai; with Filippo Scotti, Sergio Romano 25/It ****
Set in Veneto (the original title translates ironically as The Cities of the Plain), this lively comedy deconstructs the road movie genre as three men travel in circles looking for their next final drink together. While highlighting local culture and landscapes, director-cowriter Francesco Sossai cleverly explores generational issues using offhanded comedy. It's such a charmer of a film that it's impossible to watch without a smile on your face.

Three Goodbyes  [Tre Ciotole]
dir Isabel Coixet; with Alba Rohrwacher, Elio Germano 25/It ****
Diving straight into the life of a long-term couple, this Italian drama immediately finds resonance with its authentic dialog and transparent performances. This isn't easy watch, as it circles the disintegration of a relationship. But director-cowriter Isabel Coixet balances the pain by filling the screen with honest emotion, warm humour and genuine affection. This is a lovely, involving film with something important to say.

Fuori [aka Outside]
dir Mario Martone; with Valeria Golino, Matilda De Angelis 25/It ***.
Recounting the story of noted Italian actress and author Goliarda Sapienza, hinging around her brief but life-changing stint in prison, this slightly overlong film jumps around in time, which can be a little tricky to keep up with. But director Mario Martone grounds each scene in earthy realism, while Valeria Golino delves deeply under the lead character's skin. There's nothing remotely simple about this offbeat portrait of an artist.

A Brief Affair [Breve Storia d'Amore]
dir-scr Ludovica Rampoldi; with Pilar Fogliati, Adriano Giannini 26/It ****
Opening amusingly with a chess game that includes a boxing interlude, this Italian comedy takes an offhanded approach to illicit attraction. Writer-director Ludovica Rampoldi playfully explores a fling that slides into a relationship. Then as the comedy becomes increasingly dark, the film builds some rather bonkers tension. But even if it starts to feel silly, it's impossible to look away. And it ends with a series of proper kicks.

Heads or Tails? [Testa o Croce?]
dir Alessio Rigo de Righi, Matteo Zoppis; with Nadia Tereszkiewicz, Alessandro Borghi 25/It ***
From Italy, this beefy Western is told through the eyes of a woman who finds herself on the wrong side of the law with a handsome buttero, or cow-herder. Director-cowriter Alessio Rigo de Righi creates traditional genre imagery in terrific Italian locations while adding artful internalised touches that see into the characters' thoughts. The film has a meandering plot and a jaunty tone, finding edgy humour while poking fun at cliches.

NB. Full reviews will be posted on the website when these films are released in the UK and/or US. At this point, only The Last One for the Road has distribution, 1st May in the US and 10th July in the UK

Thursday, 5 March 2026

Critical Week: To the stars

It's been nice to see new films coming into cinemas for a change, alongside the continuing trickle of festival gems from last year. Perhaps the biggest movie yet, Project Hail Mary is almost a one-man show for Ryan Gosling, and it's enormously entertaining on several levels: as a comedy, thriller and outer space adventure. Include Sandra Huller back on earth and a genuinely charming friendship with a rock-like alien. Glen Powell leads How to Make a Killing, a remake of the classic black comedy Kind Hearts and Coronets that starts well but struggles to find a consistent tone. And Pixar's first film this year is Hoppers, a colourfully amiable romp with adorable critters and a wacky sci-fi twist in the premise.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Sound of Falling • Heel
ALL REVIEWS >
Further afield, I caught a big-screen presentation of the inventive Chinese epic Resurrection, with an on-screen Q&A with filmmaker Bi Gan. It's fiercely original, visually stunning, thematically a bit bewildering. The French drama Wild Foxes is a beautifully assembled drama about teen boxers, exploring machismo with a remarkably light touch. Also from France, the rather talky but beautifully animated biopic A Magnificent Life traces author and filmmaker Marcel Pagnol's life as a history of cinema itself. And from Japan, the anime crime drama The Last Blossom gets under the skin with its quietly involving storytelling. I also attended the European premiere of the emotionally intense TV series The Madison, with the entire cast in attendance, including Michelle Pfeiffer and Kurt Russell (see below).

Coming up this next week, I'll be watching Jesse Buckley in The Bride (buying a cinema ticket tomorrow because I couldn't attend the one press screening), Maika Monroe in Reminders of Him, Ferzan Ozpetek's Diamonds, Japanese/British drama A Pale View of Hills, Oscar-nominated doc Cutting Through Rocks, and quite a few movies in the BFI's Cinema Made in Italy season. I'll also attend a live performance of Sugar Daddy at Underbelly Boulevard.


Friday, 27 February 2026

Critical Week: Mother knows best

The glittering Bafta Film Awards on Sunday had controversy in their wake, thanks to some bad decisions by both Bafta and the BBC regarding editing, disclaimers and an offensive but completely involuntary Tourette's tick. But the show itself included some terrific surprises that have shaken up awards season, including Wunmi Mosaku's well-deserved supporting actress award and especially Robert Aramayo taking lead actor alongside his rising star award for I Swear, a film that speaks far more meaningfully to the controversy than clumsy online commentators. Jessie Buckley also cemented her hold on lead actress with the best speech of the night. And the biggest highlight was seeing Huntr/x perform Golden live.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Sirat • All You Need Is Kill
The Testament of Ann Lee
ThePresident's Cake
Palestine Comedy Club
PERHAPS AVOID:
Scream 7
ALL REVIEWS >
As for movies this week, Neve Campbell is back for Scream 7, a fact that fuels the movie's wittiest meta-jokes. Otherwise, this is the least scary, knowing, twisty instalment yet in the series. Lithuanian filmmaker Romas Zabarauskas is back with another thoughtful drama, The Activist, and this one has ripples of a thriller as it explores anti-LGBTQ+ violence. Matthew Simpson made the London-set thriller Disremember entirely on his own (both on camera and behind it), and it's a stylishly riveting thriller about memory and mental instability. And the documentary Palestine Comedy Club follows a group of seriously intrepid standups as they face the outbreak of war in their homeland with sharply observational wit. I also attended a special premiere of the steamy fifth episode of Bridgerton season 4 part 2, followed by a Q&A with cast members Luke Thompson and Yerin Ha, plus showrunner Jess Brownell and director Tom Verica (see below).

Coming up this next week, I'll be watching Ryan Gosling in Project Hail Mary, Glen Powell in How to Make a Killing, Pixar's new movie Hoppers, acclaimed Chinese epic Resurrection, Belgian drama Wild Foxes and anime crime drama The Last Blossom. I'm also attending the UK premiere of the new series The Madison, which stars Michelle Pfeiffer and Kurt Russell.