Sight and Sound articles

Reviews

All You Need is Death: hallucinatory horror captures the alchemical power of Irish folk ballads

Two musicologists obsessed with field recordings of Irish folk ballads uncover the dark, destructive secrets of an ancient song in Paul Duane’s chaotic and original low-budget folk horror.

By Roger Luckhurst

All You Need is Death: hallucinatory horror captures the alchemical power of Irish folk ballads
Reviews

The Book of Clarence: a messy, genre-blending Biblical epic

By Arjun Sajip

The Book of Clarence: a messy, genre-blending Biblical epic
Reviews

If Only I Could Hibernate: a beautifully crafted Mongolian drama

By Tom Charity

If Only I Could Hibernate: a beautifully crafted Mongolian drama
Reviews

Back to Black: Amy Winehouse biopic fails in its aspirations to focus on the music

By Rebecca Harrison

Back to Black: Amy Winehouse biopic fails in its aspirations to focus on the music
Reviews

The Teachers’ Lounge: the hunt for a bad apple leads to chaos in this jittery classroom thriller

By Catherine Wheatley

The Teachers’ Lounge: the hunt for a bad apple leads to chaos in this jittery classroom thriller
Reviews

Civil War: Alex Garland’s spectacle of violence is determined to throw the audience off balance

By Henry K Miller

Civil War: Alex Garland’s spectacle of violence is determined to throw the audience off balance
Reviews

Yannick: a disgruntled heckler hijacks a play in Quentin Dupieux’s wry comedy

By John Bleasdale

Yannick: a disgruntled heckler hijacks a play in Quentin Dupieux’s wry comedy
Reviews

Io Capitano: a surreal, shapeshifting quest for a new life in Europe

By Jason Anderson

Io Capitano: a surreal, shapeshifting quest for a new life in Europe
Reviews

The First Omen: a surprisingly lively take on well-worn franchise mythology

By Adam Nayman

The First Omen: a surprisingly lively take on well-worn franchise mythology
Reviews

Monkey Man: Dev Patel wreaks brutal havoc in a muddled but enthralling revenge drama

By Guy Lodge

Monkey Man: Dev Patel wreaks brutal havoc in a muddled but enthralling revenge drama
Reviews

Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire: an enjoyably goofy monster mash

By Kim Newman

Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire: an enjoyably goofy monster mash
Reviews

The Sweet East: a risky, uncompromising road movie

By Catherine Wheatley

The Sweet East: a risky, uncompromising road movie
Reviews

Mothers’ Instinct: maternal grief turns deadly in this intense but predictable psychological thriller

By Kate Stables

Mothers’ Instinct: maternal grief turns deadly in this intense but predictable psychological thriller
Reviews

Opus: Sakamoto Ryuichi performs his swan songs

By Sam Wigley

Opus: Sakamoto Ryuichi performs his swan songs
Reviews

Late Night with the Devil: an underwhelming horror with an ingenious concept

By Adam Nayman

Late Night with the Devil: an underwhelming horror with an ingenious concept
Reviews

Baltimore: thrilling heist movie tells the story of Rose Dugdale, a British heiress turned IRA member

By Katie McCabe

Baltimore: thrilling heist movie tells the story of Rose Dugdale, a British heiress turned IRA member
From the Sight and Sound archive

“Scorsese has become the threnodist of frustration”: After Hours reviewed in 1986

By Richard Combs

“Scorsese has become the threnodist of frustration”: After Hours reviewed in 1986
Reviews

Immaculate: Rosemary’s Baby reimagined as a giallo in a convent

By Anton Bitel

Immaculate: Rosemary’s Baby reimagined as a giallo in a convent
Reviews

The Delinquents: a bank robbery movie that plays like an existential epic

By Adam Nayman

The Delinquents: a bank robbery movie that plays like an existential epic
Reviews

Robot Dreams: Pablo Berger’s touching silent animation shows how swiftly a bond of affection can mark a life

By Alex Dudok de Wit

Robot Dreams: Pablo Berger’s touching silent animation shows how swiftly a bond of affection can mark a life
Reviews

Exhuma: Korean occult horror excavates multiple layers of weirdness

By Anton Bitel

Exhuma: Korean occult horror excavates multiple layers of weirdness
Reviews

The New Boy: realism is undercut by magic in Warwick Thornton’s Outback fable

By Jonathan Romney

The New Boy: realism is undercut by magic in Warwick Thornton’s Outback fable
Reviews

Banel & Adama: Ramata-Toulaye Sy’s elemental love story has the air of a parable

By Annabel Bai Jackson

Banel & Adama: Ramata-Toulaye Sy’s elemental love story has the air of a parable
Reviews

Drive-Away Dolls: a lesbian road trip comedy that feels authentic to the 1990s but stuck there, too

By Simran Hans

Drive-Away Dolls: a lesbian road trip comedy that feels authentic to the 1990s but stuck there, too
Reviews

Monster: Koreeda Hirokazu’s elegant and imaginative expression of childhood

By Guy Lodge

Monster: Koreeda Hirokazu’s elegant and imaginative expression of childhood
Reviews

Imaginary: a sufficiently creepy domestic ghost story

By Kim Newman

Imaginary: a sufficiently creepy domestic ghost story
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High & Low: John Galliano: a thoughtful, expansive portrait of a disgraced fashion designer

By Nick Bradshaw

High & Low: John Galliano: a thoughtful, expansive portrait of a disgraced fashion designer
Reviews

Origin: Ava DuVerney’s book biopic presents an ambitious study of caste systems

By Kate Stables

Origin: Ava DuVerney’s book biopic presents an ambitious study of caste systems
Reviews

Copa 71: the fascinating story of the unofficial Women’s World Cup

By Rachel Pronger

Copa 71: the fascinating story of the unofficial Women’s World Cup
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