Marie Amachoukeli-Barsacq's captivating French coming-of-age drama is one seldom seen on screen, told with affection, heartfelt sincerity and cinematic perfection.
50 years on, this powerful documentary explores in great detail the Dublin and Monaghan bombings. From director Joe Lee (406 Days: The Debenhams Picket Line).
Rose Glass’ gripping and gory follow-up to Saint Maud finds a lesbian couple drawn into a web of violence in 1980s small-town New Mexico.
After their very short short film Sasquatch Birth Journal 2, David and Nathan Zellner now take us into the life of a family that has remained hidden from humanity, immersed in the North American wilderness.
Daniel Gordon’s (Hillsborough) feature documentary Strike: An Uncivil War tells the story of the Battle of Orgreave, the most violent confrontation between Miners and Police during the 1984/85 Miners’ Strike in Great Britain.
Capturing a year in the life of a rural, lakeside community in late 1970s Ireland, That They May Face The Rising Sun is a sensitive and beautifully realised adaptation of the last novel by John McGahern.