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Thursday, Apr 30, 2026
New REVIEWS!
Exit 8 (2025) Liminal Horror More Emotionally Potent than Horrific
Extreme Private Eros: Love Song 1974 (1974): emotional violence transcending the limits of documentary form
Salem’s Lot (1979): A Masterclass in Slow-Burn Horror
New Directors from Japan: Takashi Ono (2016-2023)
Knights of the Teutonic Order (1960): most super of the Polish “super productions”
Underworld Chronicles (1996-2002) Three Films, One Filmmaker, Zero Rules – Takashi Miike
Hard Boiled 4K (1992) Where John Woo pushed action cinema to its extreme
Long Live the Republic! (1965): World War II through the eyes of a Czech Fellini
Redoubt (2026) Turning Video Art Into A Visually Compelling Feature
Haunters of the Silence (2025) A lo‑fi plunge into the uncanny space between dreaming and waking
Excalibur (1981) Boorman’s bold, mystical retelling of Arthurian legend
The Devil’s Hand (1943): A dark wartime parable

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Paths of Glory (1957) Kubrick’s Antiwar Masterpiece in 4K (Review)

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Graham Williamson

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Couple in a Hole (2015) Satisfying small drama from debuting Belgian Director (Review)

Graham Williamson 08/04/2016
Couple in a Hole (2015) Satisfying small drama from debuting Belgian Director (Review)

Tom Geens’s Couple in a Hole begins with a gorgeous, slow shot of a forest at the height of summer, then it delivers its first jolt before the film is two minutes old.  Geens’s second film after 2009’s Menteur, Couple in a Hole is his first work outside his native Belgium, […]

  • Movies & Documentaries
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The Sound Barrier (1952) David Lean, The Showman with Substance? (Review)

Graham Williamson 05/04/2016
The Sound Barrier (1952) David Lean, The Showman with Substance? (Review)

Despite being a hit on its 1952 release, The Sound Barrier is now one of the least-seen of David Lean’s films.  A shame, as it represents an artist in the middle of a fascinating transition.  Released just five years before The Bridge on the River Kwai, its daring spectacle points […]

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Ken Russell: The Great Passions (1965-7)(Review)

Graham Williamson 29/03/2016
Ken Russell: The Great Passions (1965-7)(Review)

How many BBC arts documentaries of the 1960s do you think begin with the exhumation of a mummified corpse, lit by flickering torches and soundtracked by booming horror-movie music? Not many, I’ll wager, but then there weren’t many directors walking the corridors of Broadcasting House who resembled Ken Russell. For […]

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Sheba, Baby (1975) Blaxploitation, PG style (Review)

Graham Williamson 21/03/2016
Sheba, Baby (1975) Blaxploitation, PG style (Review)

On the face of it, we shouldn’t need to watch blaxploitation any more.  As soon as Will Smith and Denzel Washington became viable Hollywood action movie stars, its USP of showing black actors in empowered, heroic roles was co-opted.  This, though, ignores the pleasures of blaxploitation as a movie-making style; […]

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Shooting Stars (1928) Unapologetically British Silent Film Glamour (Review)

Graham Williamson 21/03/2016
Shooting Stars (1928) Unapologetically British Silent Film Glamour (Review)

It’s not often that I’m prescriptive about the way you choose to watch a film, but if you do get the BFI’s new dual-format edition of Anthony Asquith and A.V. Bramble’s pioneering British silent Shooting Stars, watch the extras first. The main bonus feature is a near-fifty minute compilation of […]

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Something Different / A Bagful of Fleas (1962-3) breezy, charming and fiercely political (Review)

Graham Williamson 02/03/2016
Something Different / A Bagful of Fleas (1962-3) breezy, charming and fiercely political (Review)

Before we get into Second Run’s new release of Věra Chytilová’s debut film and the short that preceded it, let’s take a second to acknowledge that all of Chytilová’s 1960s work (barring her contribution to the 1965 anthology film Pearls of the Deep) is now available on British DVD. This […]

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Fixed Bayonets! (1951) Gleefully old-fashioned Korean War pulp poetry (Review)

Graham Williamson 14/02/2016
Fixed Bayonets! (1951) Gleefully old-fashioned Korean War pulp poetry (Review)

Before he was a director, Samuel Fuller fought in World War II and worked as a tabloid journalist.  The former experience shaped his politics, the latter shaped his sensibility.  If Fuller’s films sometimes seem simplistic, their simplicity is at least born of sincerity.   He knows what he believes, and he […]

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Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959) Rarely been bettered in the 57 years since (Review)

Graham Williamson 13/01/2016
Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959) Rarely been bettered in the 57 years since (Review)

Forgive the sentimentality, but one of your correspondent’s all-time idols has just died unexpectedly (you know who it is- it’s not Ed ‘Stewpot’ Stewart) and it is hard to review a film about loss, pain and memory without wondering about all these obituaries, and who they are for. Perhaps a […]

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Aferim! (2015) Django Unchained being played over images from Meek’s Cutoff (Review)

Graham Williamson 14/12/2015
Aferim! (2015) Django Unchained being played over images from Meek’s Cutoff  (Review)

Since Cristi Puiu’s 2005 breakthrough The Death of Mr Lazarescu, Western European audiences have grown accustomed to seeing a certain kind of film come out of Romania.  They came to be known as the Romanian New Wave, and even the most dedicated sceptic of national film movements would have to […]

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By Our Selves (2015) An Andrew Kötting Appreciation

Graham Williamson 30/11/2015
By Our Selves (2015) An Andrew Kötting Appreciation

It is a bright, sunny day some time in 2014, and Eden Kötting is alive. She is drawing on a transparent sheet with a big black felt tip, and explaining how powerful people are all fools. This simple set-up is the basis for This Illuminated World is Full of Stupid […]

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