Daniel Hess
Mar 25, 2021
Elaine [Guillermo Quintanilla-Pinto, UK, 2019]
Religion is a home for so many, a place to seek true guidance in life. It is a shame that even in modern times there are still a...
Will Whitehead
Mar 25, 2021
Echoes of Kerberos [Ross Kolton, USA, 2020]
Ross Kolton’s Echoes of Kerberos is a visually arresting and deeply strange psychological thriller, in which an office worker is plagued...
Freddie Deighton
Mar 25, 2021
Hermit [Omid Mirzaei, Islamic Republic of Iran, 2020]
Hermit is a very tragic film about grief and the loneliness that follows it. It’s very simply made, but it conveys quite a lot of emotion...
Freddie Deighton
Mar 24, 2021
Why Did The Mathematician Go To The Art Gallery? [Beatrice A. Taylor Searle/Joe Hughes, UK, 2020]
Why Did The Mathematician Go To The Art Gallery? is a charming little short about life and what we do with it, along with art and what...
Daniel Hess
Mar 23, 2021
The Stain [Shoresh Vakili, Islamic Republic of Iran, 2020]
There are no true victors in any war, simply the calamitous fallout and indelible emotional imprint for all involved. And what happens...
Kiran McCann
Mar 22, 2021
Saints of Anarchy — Episode 1: ‘The Never Go’ [Jamale Ellison, USA, 2021]
Episode 1 of Saints of Anarchy opens with an incredibly interesting premise; Earth has merged into another dimension through the...
Rahaf Altrais
Mar 21, 2021
The Gossip [Rolfin Nyhus, UK, 2020]
Relationships are complicated; friendships even more so, often harder to define and maintain, especially when we are young.
Daniel Hess
Mar 21, 2021
Amaranthine [Chen Jiexiao, Singapore/China, 2021]
A densely packed and highly meditative experimental short film, Amaranthine provides a strong commentary on the gentrification...
Fung Ying Cheng
Mar 20, 2021
Papa Was a Rolling Stone [Keith Williams, USA, 2020]
Sharing the title with the popular song by The Temptations, Keith Williams’ Papa Was a Rolling Stone focuses on the emotional turmoil...
Daniel Hess
Mar 20, 2021
Asra [Caio Cortonesi, Brazil, 2018]
Asra delivers a beautifully honest and compelling story that tackles subjects not just strikingly uncommon in cinema...