Film

Webfeed
  • Interview: Simon Hattenstone meets the contradictory Tilda Swinton, the Hollywood indie actor who has never been happier
  • Interview: Artist and film-maker Steve McQueen on Miles Davis, the Caribs and the death of his father
  • Feature: Hollywood cops have had a bad rap on screen, says David Stubbs. But could their corruption, cover-ups and racism be even worse in real life?
  • Ben Child: Matt Damon's thuggy amnesiac already seems pretty immortal. But could he return to our screens as often as 007?
  • Comment: As another "insider" movie satire pulls its punches, John Patterson wonders if we'll ever get a Hollywood tell-all that tells all
  • This week's films

  • Body of Lies
  • Body of Lies

    2 out of 5
  • Quarantine

    2 out of 5
  • Blindness

    4 out of 5
  • Choke

    3 out of 5

Find a film

Films A-Z

More from our blogs

Multimedia

Chucky in Child's Play

Objets d'aaaaarrrgh

Still from The Dark Knight

Dissecting The Dark Knight: Batman (2min 13sec)

Josh Brolin as George Bush

'W is a surreal tour through a bygone America' (2min 21sec)

let's talk about the rain

In the director's chair: Agnès Jaoui and Jean-Pierre Bacri (7min 39sec)

Angelina Jolie fights back tears as she talks about her late mother at a London press conference

Angelina Jolie on Clint Eastwood's Changeling: 'As a mum it was horrible' (3min 52sec)

Mickey Mouse at Disney World

Video: It's a Mickey Mouse birthday (1min 52sec)

Terrence davies

In the director's chair: Terence Davies, director of Of Time and the City (8min 45sec)

Heath Ledger as The Joker in The Dark Knight

Dissecting The Dark Knight: The Joker (2min 17sec)

Tilda Swinton

Tilda Swinton: 'Thatcher brought me and my father closer together' (4min 36sec)

Mark Strong and Leonardo DiCaprio in Body of Lies

Film Weekly podcast: Jason Solomons meets Mark Strong and Paddy Considine (35min 05sec)

Sacha Baron Cohen as Borat

Sounds Jewish podcast: November 2008 (29min 14sec)

Waltz With Bashir

Film Weekly podcast: interview with Waltz with Bashir director Ari Folman (40min 53sec)

Wallace and Gromit

Gallery: Wallace and Gromit in pictures

A scene from a porn film

Porn film opening scenes

Stranger than Paradise

Poster service Stranger than Paradise and road movies

George Bush and Josh Brolin

Who looks like who in W

More news and features

  • Video (1min 57sec), Xan Brooks is bowled over by Ari Folman's inventive animated documentary about the Sabra and Shatila massacre of 1982
  • Interview: Robert Carlyle made his name with tough, violent and damaged characters. But it won't stop him appearing in 24 or playing Leonard Rossiter, he tells Kirsty Scott
  • News: Maverick director reveals plans to resurrect project dropped after a freak storm in 1999, and his hopes for his new movie, which features Heath Ledger's last celluloid appearance
  • The price of popcorn: Catherine Hardwicke's dreamy, tween-targeted vampire film could take novice player Summit Entertainment into the big leagues, writes Jeremy Kay
  • Video (6min 11sec), City of God and The Constant Gardener director Fernando Meirelles talks to Jason Solomons about his new film Blindness
  • Feature: He sang with the greats and was feted by jazz's best-known stars. But what happened to Jackie Paris? Raymond De Felitta tells a story of unfulfilled promise
  • Comment: What happens when your best efforts are forgotten or ignored? Mike Hodges explains what it's like to make a "lost film"
  • Reel history: The anachronistic soundtrack and other fanciful liberties are the least of Marie-Antoinette's problems - without context, it's just plain boring. By Alex von Tunzelmann
  • Feature: The twentysomething writer of Gus Van Sant's new film Milk interviewed everyone he could find who had known Harvey Milk
  • Blog: Why rob one of the capital's smartest venues of its individuality? Ryan Gilbey is bereft
  • News: Mary and Max, about an eight-year-old Melbourne girl's correspondence with a 42-year-old man in New York, is to open next year's indie fest
  • Feature: A film about disabled people that actually stars disabled actors? Patrick Barkham on a milestone in mainstream cinema