Anthony Hopkins is at his sarcastic best in a story that imagines a battle of wills that took place shortly before Freud’s death.
Director Luca Guadagnino does everything he can to distract you from the game in this fast-paced,time-tripping drama.
Kirsten Dunst stars as a photojournalist in this grimly candid portrait of the US ruled by a dictator in the White House – and a society under collapse.
Inspired by Don Lane,the American who dominated the Australian chat show in the mid-’70s and early ’80s,Late Night with the Devil hits the right notes.
The filmmaker’s 2002 epic is the cinematic equivalent of a tabloid paper.
Part biopic,part polemic,Ava DuVernay’s new film Origin has an undeniably powerful moment,but it’s hardly revelatory.
Nominated for a Best International Film Oscar,and based on real-life stories,Io Capitano is a coming-of-age story that finds hope among the desperation.
Wicked Little Letters is a fictionalised version of a celebrated legal case that transfixed 1920s Britain.
In Immaculate,the star of Euphoria and The White Lotus runs the gamut of sweet-natured optimism to blood-stained desperation in less than 90 minutes.
Stewart is a woman unravelling under the pressure of a violent father and a girlfriend set on revenge in the ultra-violent black farce,Love Lies Bleeding.
Read what our reviewers thought of all the films nominated for best picture at this year’s Oscars.