The Hindi language movie Santosh, the debut fictional feature-length film from director Sandhya Suri, will get a release date in the U.S. during the last few days of 2024.
Despite starring fan-favorite actors Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield, We Live in Time collapses under its eagerness to move and impress us, overusing the "interpolated relationship timeline" trope
Venice Silver Lion winner The Brutalist, a fictional post-World War II film following the life of Hungarian-born Jewish architect László Tóth after he arrives in America, will debut in time for the holidays.
Britain has fetishized the “Blitz spirit” mantra of keeping calm and carrying on, and if there was a filmmaker perfect for demythologizing the bombings, it’s Steve McQueen. That he doesn't is what makes Blitz so disappointing.
If you can't get to London in the next few months to see the West End transfer of Macbeth with David Tennant and Cush Jumbo, don't worry. The production will be coming to cinemas in the U.S. and the U.K.
The U.K. has selected Sandhya Suri’s debut fictional feature film, Santosh, to represent British filmmaking at the 2025 Academy Awards, submitting it for Best International Feature.