After Love
80.7% Film
After Love is poignant, melancholy and a stunningly successful film, which is likely to be the best British film you’ll see this year.
After Love is poignant, melancholy and a stunningly successful film, which is likely to be the best British film you’ll see this year.
Featuring witty dialogue and deft performances, In Bruges is an effective mix of dark comedy and crime thriller elements.
While its premise is ripe for comedy — and it certainly delivers its fair share of laughs — Priscilla is also a surprisingly tender and thoughtful road movie with some outstanding performances.
A heart-warming tale of Tom (Timothy Spall), a pensioner whose wife, Mary (Phyllis Logan), has just passed away, who travels from Britain’s most northerly point, John O’Groats, to his original home town at its most southerly point, Land’s End, using his free bus pass.
Dominic Cooke’s true-life drama explores how history can be made by the most humble of people committing the smallest of actions
With beautiful direction and cinematography plus a haunting score, and excellent acting by Eva Green and Zélie Boulant, Proxima is a perceptive reflection on motherhood and the bond between mother and daughter.
Winner of 3 Oscars including Best Picture, Nomadland powerfully dramatizes the very human need to find connections in the face of desolation.
Parasite has become the first non-English speaking film to win 4 Oscars including Best Picture. Packed full of twists, surprising emotional insights, and drastic tonal shifts, Parasite will keep you guessing until the very end.
With Anthony Hopkins and Olivia Colman delivering some of the best work of their careers, The Father presents a devastatingly empathetic portrayal of dementia. It’s tough to watch at times but Hopkins’ performance makes it impossible not to.
Maiden tells the story of Tracy Edwards, a 24-year-old cook on charter boats, who became the skipper of the first ever all-female crew to enter the Whitbread Round the World Race in 1989. Maiden is enthralling viewing even for audiences with little to no knowledge of, or interest, in sailing and pays powerful tribute to a true pioneer.