The Black Phone is a child-killer horror flick to avoid like the plague
Adapted from a short story by Stephen King's son, and with an ill-cast Ethan Hawke, this is a hellish blend of tastelessness and ineptitude
Adapted from a short story by Stephen King's son, and with an ill-cast Ethan Hawke, this is a hellish blend of tastelessness and ineptitude
The deluded and single-minded guerrilla Hiroo Onoda is an archetypal Herzog hero for the director's literary debut, The Twilight World
Cooper Raiff (25) writes, directs and stars in a terrific comedy further enriched by Vanessa Burghardt, a debuting actress on the spectrum
This seriocomic piece sees Thompson's fiftysomething ex-RE teacher hire a sex worker – but it’s unsure what tone it prefers to strike
Rob Savage’s film simulates a live-stream that turns sinister, but its exhaustingly aggravating lead makes you want to log off
This witty tale of creative rivalry, in competition at Cannes, proves Kelly Reichardt is one of our best directors
The director Cristian Mungiu returns to Cannes with another Palme contender, heavy on atmosphere and grit, if not political subtlety
This Korean-language drama about child trafficking is a rare dud, full of clunky pathos and clunkier characterisation
The Goodfellas star's matinee idol looks and reptilian charisma proved a killer combination throughout his career
This documentary about the late superstar, which has just premiered at Cannes, is an experience to greedily inhale in a packed cinema
Park Chan-wook's latest is stylistically sensational - although take a loo break and you may lose the plot
Moonage Daydream – made with hours of unseen footage – is every Bowie fan's dream. But for the man who put it together, it’s a lifesaver
Based on the real case of a family man who murdered 16 prostitutes in Mashhad, Iran, this Cannes premiere will chill you to the bone
In this evocative late 90s-set drama, the Irish actor consolidates his position as one of the most gifted actors of his generation
Léa Seydoux is magnificent in this French drama, looking after generations young and old while pursuing an illicit affair
Terence Davies does little to sugarcoat the inner torment of Sassoon in this uncompromising biopic