movies
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Russell Crowe, the star of The Nice Guys – Shane Black’s action comedy about a pair of misfit guns for hire who are trying to track down a missing porn star – talks to Andrew Pulver
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The X-Men’s superhero status is challenged but not toppled by Alice Through the Looking Glass, while Love & Friendship gets plenty of affection over bank holiday
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Danish film-maker reported to be under consideration to take over from Sam Mendes at the helm of the next 007 installment
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Disney adds four extra weeks to sci-fi spin-off’s production schedule after executives judge early cut as feeling too much ‘like a war movie’
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Film-maker says it would be pointless to show his Palme d’Or-winner I, Daniel Blake to Conservative government
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Listen to The Dailies, the Guardian's film podcastListen to The Dailies, the Guardian's film podcastRogue One reshoots and Alice falls down a hole – the Dailies film podcastThe Guardian film team’s round-up of Wednesday’s movie news
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Entertaining mayhem ensues when some of the Avengers reject government oversight following a botched operation
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Jacques Audiard’s confident Palme d’Or-winner has a rare and keen interest in its characters – a trio of Tamil refugees in Paris – and an exhilarating mastery of style
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In Luca Guadagnino’s simmering drama, two ex-lovers are disastrously reunited at a Mediterranean villa where the pool is a temple of bared flesh and sex perfumes the air
video & audio
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The Guardian film team’s round-up of Wednesday’s movie news
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After his triumphant Palme d’Or win at this year’s Cannes film festival, a new documentary is looking back on the vast career of the acclaimed British film-maker
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The Guardian film team’s round-up of Tuesday’s movie news
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Film critic Luke Buckmaster speaks with Chasing Asylum director Eva Orner and Guardian Australia reporter Melissa Davey after a screening of the documentary for Guardian Australia’s Film Club. They discuss safeguarding sources, why Orner decided to show security guards’ faces and how the film’s release strategy was designed to avoid government interference
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Cristian Mungiu, the director of 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days and Beyond the Hills talks to Nigel M Smith about his new film
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The Guardian film team’s round-up of Friday’s movie news
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The Belgian siblings speak about their new film, why they are drawn to stories of female empowerment and how they think The Unknown Girl might be received in the US
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The trailer for the Finding Nemo sequel features a brief shot of two women with a baby – leading to excited speculation that Disney-Pixar is swimming with the LGBT tide
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Shock tactics would send a message about studios’ willingness to catch up with society – but there are better candidates than Steve Rogers
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After decades of selling young girls damsels in distress, Disney has finally made a run of films with strong female roles. It’s just a shame it took them so long
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No one would begrudge the great director his second Palme d’Or victory for a drama with a noble, emphatic message. Yet it also serves to illustrate the differences between the Cannes crowd and the wider film audience
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The director son of David Bowie on his £100m franchise movie and the downside of geek culture
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Australian writer-director says of The Nightingale, the first film after her thrilling debut, ‘It’s certainly not a horror film but it’s a pretty horrific world’
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Bridesmaids made her one of the world’s most highly paid actresses. Now she’s taking over from the men in Ghostbusters
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No female actor in Hollywood would touch it. But the director’s perverse black comedy starring Isabelle Huppert was the toast of Cannes. The controversial film-maker talks about his most daring work yet
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Speaking at Hay festival, veteran writer, who adapted War & Peace for the BBC, said Victor Hugo’s novel needs a champion
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The Canadian actor’s portrayal of the athlete’s triumph in Race, set in the 1936 Berlin Olympics, is a tale of success in spite of racism. And today, James says the lack of Hollywood diversity means he has to work twice as hard
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The controversial actor and director stars as a former biker in thriller Blood Father. To research the role, he talked to gang members and undercover DEA agents – and learned how to be a terrible tattoo artist
regulars
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Five best momentsFive best momentsGeorge Clooney: five best momentsThe Oscar-winner reunites with Julia Roberts for his financial thriller Money Monster but what have been his greatest on-screen roles?
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The film quizThe film quizBlood test: match the red stuff to the film – quizAs Iggy Pop stars in the violent thriller Blood Orange this week, test your knowledge about how many bloody scenes you recognise for past films
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UK box office reportUK box office reportAlice sequel slips up as X-Men maintain a heroic hold on the UK box officeThe X-Men’s superhero status is challenged but not toppled by Alice Through the Looking Glass, while Love & Friendship gets plenty of affection over bank holiday
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Charlie Lyne's home entertainmentCharlie Lyne's home entertainmentArabian Nights: satire meets Scheherazade in epic Portuguese trilogyMiguel Gomes explores his country’s austerity years via myth and dick jokes
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Silent but deadly!Silent but deadly!A window on infinity: rediscovering the short films of the Lumière brothersAs shown by a new restoration of some of the 1,400 shorts that the pioneers of early cinema filmed, the Lumières were true artists as well as inventors
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Guy Lodge on DVDs and downloadsGuy Lodge on DVDs and downloadsOur Brand Is Crisis; Youth; The Club; Rams; 600 Miles; Goosebumps; The Peanuts Movie; Bon Voyage Charlie Brown – reviewSandra Bullock shines as a hard-nosed spin doctor, a pampered Michael Caine overdoes the white male gaze – and why The Peanuts Movie offers little to Snoopy nostalgists
you may have missed
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Miguel Gomes explores his country’s austerity years via myth and dick jokes
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A new poster for oil spill disaster film Deepwater Horizon has John Malkovich looking like a stern yet camp science teacher in a sitcom – but he’s not the only actor to have made a left-field expression choice in a one-sheet
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In 1969, Philip Trevelyan filmed the beguilingly strange life of the Page family, who lived off-grid and rode steam engines round their wood. The director talks about how the film changed his life
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Miles Ahead and Born to Be Blue immortalise Miles Davis and link him to Chet Baker. I’m all for expanding the cinetrompette genre: the candidates pick themselves
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The films previewed at Cannes span revolutionary politics, explicit nudity and paranormal activity. Here are the five top themes
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These movies won’t win awards – they’ll be lucky just to get an audience. Here are some of the horror shows looking for a buyer at the festival
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From Pedro Almodovar’s sexually suggestive reindeer to Andrea Arnold’s big yawning bear, animals have invaded the Cannes film festival – on screen and off
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Popstar review Bieber-esque parody skewers bratty boy bands