DMovies - Your platform for thought-provoking cinema
The fields "country of origin" and "actor" were created in May 2023, and the results are limited to after this date.
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Review Archive
Andrea’s Love (El Amor de Andrea) Fifteen-year-old Spanish girl seeks paternal affection, in this quietly moving tale of family secrets and abandonment - live from the Official Selection of the 27th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival [Read More...]
The Ghosts Cult And Big Brother: Mad On The Final Black Night Korean film uses explicit sex and exuberant visuals as peculiar gauge if war, without prescribing to Western storytelling - live from the Rebels With a Cause Competition of the 27th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival [Read More...]
My Freedom (Mana Brīvība) A historical drama concerning a Polish-born journalist, politician and prominent voice in the Latvian independence movement of the late 1980s is in the Baltic Competition of the 27th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival [Read More...]
Great Sertão (Grande Sertão) The relationship between a man and his friend constantly shifts against the backdrop of street gang and army wars - filthy genius Brazilian drama premieres at the Critics' Picks Competition of the 27th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival [Read More...]
The Man from Rome (De Man uit Rome) Italian priest investigates a crying Virgin Mary statue in the Netherlands, in the familiar and yet inconclusive battle between faith and science - from the Official Competition of the 27th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival [Read More...]
Dark Paradise (Tume Paradiis) Beneath the provocation of sex, drink, drugs and violence lies a tender of self-loss - live from the Baltic Competition of the 27th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival [Read More...]
The Test Batshit crazy characters make up for the imperfections in Ramūnas Cicėnas's black comedy - from the Baltic Competition of the 27th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival [Read More...]
Unmoored Can a seemingly happy marriage survive after the husband has been accused of sexual assault? British indie raising uncomfortable questions is in cinemas on Friday, August 15th [Read More...]
Mo Mamma Impressive Estonian feature starts out as a Beckettian horror before turning into something endearing and heartfelt - from the First Feature Competition of the 27th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival [Read More...]
Oxygen Station (Kysneva Stantsiia) The little-known history of Crimean Tatars is the backbone of this disjoined tale of romance and political dissent - from the Official Selection of the 27th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival [Read More...]
Patient#1 Creepy allegory of Soviet authoritarianism and political delusion is aesthetically and narratively compelling - live from the Official Selection of the 27th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival [Read More...]
Vera and the Pleasure of Others (Vera y el Placer de los Otros) Argentinian coming-of-age drama features sex scene after sex scene, with a bizarre twist of Jean-Luc Godard thrown in - from the First Feature Competition of the 27th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival [Read More...]
One Life Anthony Hopkins stars as the "British Schindler", a London stockbroker who saved 669 Czechoslovakian children from almost certain death at WW2 - now on VoD [Read More...]
The Narrow Bridge Four Israeli and Palestinian individuals who have lost their loved ones find the will to forge ahead without becoming intoxicated by hate, in this heartwarming documentary - from the UK Jewish Film Festival [Read More...]
Embers In Christian Cooke’s therapeutic drama, a sexual surrogate helps an incarcerated, deeply disturbed man break out of himself in order to make parole - dirty gem of a British drama premieres at the 31st edition of Raindance [Read More...]
Foremost by Night (Sobre Todo de Noche) Film programmer Víctor Iriarte's directorial debut is an intriguing revenge tale about stolen babies and sorority, and the near-perfect blend of noir and art cinema - from the 68th Valladolid International Cinema Week [Read More...]
Another Body Vital documentary shares a personal account of being a victim of deepfake pornography - in cinemas on Friday, November 24th [Read More...]
Catching Dust Two combustible marriages reach breaking point in the Texas desert – director Stuart Gatt’s feature debut premieres at the 31st Raindance Film Festival [Read More...]
All the Colours of the World Are Between Black and White In this queer drama from Nigeria (!!!), two men try to quell the love they feel for each other, even at the expense of their personal happiness - from the 31st edition of Raindance [Read More...]
Blood for Dust A traveling salesman slips into a life crime in order to provide for his wife, in this steady and authentic American indie - from the 31st edition of Raindance [Read More...]
La Singla Documentary (with a few fictional elements thrown in) seeks to restore the legacy of deaf gypsy flamenco dancer Antonia Singla, a figure long lost from public sight - from the 31st Raindance Film Festival [Read More...]
Parachute An empathetic and thoughtful story about eating disorders, and the toxicity of the comparative and self-critical gaze - Britanny Snow's directorial debut premieres at the 31st edition of Raindance [Read More...]
Warhol Adam Ethan Crow’s real-time feature takes an ageing shock jock on a long dark night of the soul - British indie premieres at the 31st edition of the Raindance Film Festival [Read More...]
White Plastic Sky (Műanyag Ég-bolt) Retiring at 50 takes on a new meaning in this Hungarian rotoscope animation set in a very bizarre future - from the 41st Turin Film Festival [Read More...]
Dusty & Stones A couple of cowboys from Swaziland (now Eswatini) are just… living the dream – and yet, even in their dreams, this would have been hard to accomplish - from the 31st Raindance Film Festival [Read More...]
We are Guardians The Amazon Rainforest becomes a battleground for the planet, in this thoughtful American-Brazilian doc about the true cost of deforestation - from the 31st Raindance Film Festival [Read More...]
Satan Wants You This almost unbelievable Canadian documentary tells a story of the the occults, satanism, manipulation, and especially deceit; an event so dramatic and unholy that it kicked off the “Satanic Panic [Read More...]
Miúcha, the Voice of Bossa Nova Brazilian bossa nova singer had to fight to get her voice heard in an industry that pitted her against the many men she worked with - from the Doc'n' Roll Film Festival. [Read More...]
All of Us Strangers Gentle queer romance descends into elaborate trip down memory lane, as British filmmaker Andrew Haigh blurs the lines between the physical, the imaginary and the supernatural - on VoD on Monday, April 8th [Read More...]
Ferrari Michael Mann’s first feature film in nearly a decade is fascinated by the significance, both personal and historical, that name carries for its chief figures - in cinemas on Tuesday, December 26th [Read More...]
Killers of the Flower Moon A returning WW1 veteran marries into Oklahoma’s Osage Indian tribe at the time of the Osage Indian Murders - Martin Scorsese's filthy genius new drama premieres at the BFI London Film Fesstival; in cinemas on Friday, October 20th [Read More...]
Eureka Viggo Mortensen is a Danish gunslinger in search of his daughter, in this pseudo-Western authored by one of Argentina's most modest yet striking filmmakers - from the 61st New York Film Festival [Read More...]
Rock Hudson: All That Heaven Allowed The complicated life and the dirty secrets of the heartthrob [Read More...]
Coup de Chance Woody Allen’s first French-language feature is a morality tale about writers, adultery, murder and, of course, chance; while not a masterpiece, his 50th (and most likely last) film is a worthy addition to his extensive filmography [Read More...]
Still Working 9 to 5 Star-studded American doc about the barriers that women still have to overcome at the workplace has a sobering message: the struggle for Equal Rights that began in the 1970s is far from over - from the Doc'n Roll Film Festival [Read More...]
Apolonia, Apolonia Danish documentarist portrays the iridescent life of French figurative painter Apolonia Sokol - from the 67th edition of the BFI London Film Festival [Read More...]
Hit Man Professor supplements his income by providing technical support for the New Orleans Police Department's Murder-for-Hire outfit, in Richard Linklater's partially successful Neo-noir - now on Netflix [Read More...]
The Blue Star (La Estrella Azul) Unconventional portrait of long-forgotten Spanish musician Mauricio Aznar takes viewers on a transcontinental journey of self-discovery (between Spain and Argentina) - from the 71st San Sebastian International Film Festival. [Read More...]
Poor Things Yorgos Lanthimos repackages history with an exquisite singularity as well as a faux-provocative attitude, fearful of pushing audiences to look beyond their own bodies - Golden Lion winner is in cinemas on Friday, January 12th [Read More...]
Toll (Pedágio) Road toll worker slips into a life of crime in order to pay for her son's gay conversion therapy, in this spectacularly dirty Brazilian piece of absurd realism - in competition at Tiff Romania [Read More...]
Great Absence A young man tries to make peace with the father who once abandoned him is now slowly succumbing to dementia - Japanese drama is in Competition at the 71st San Sebastian International Film Festival [Read More...]
Dance First Gabriel Byrne stars as Irish writer Samuel Beckett, in this concise yet very conventional and contrived biopic of a literary genius - from the 41st Turin Film Festival and the 3rd Red Sea International Film Festival [Read More...]
Close your Eyes (Cerrar los Ojos) Victor Erice returns to filmmaking after a three-decade hiatus, crafting a protracted, moody and profound reflection on memory, cinema and reconnection (with a twist) - On VoD on Monday, June 24th [Read More...]
The Royal Hotel Two young backpackers take up jobs at a watering hole from hell in the Australian desert, frequented by lewd miners and shady characters of various sorts - female revenge thriller is in cinemas on Friday, November 3rd [Read More...]
Red Island (L’Île Rouge) French military families prepare to depart from Madagascar in the early 1970s, in this disjointed, irritating and misfiring tale of decolonisation (partially redeemed by the final 15 minutes) - on VoD on Monday, April 29th [Read More...]
A Journey in Spring (Chun Xing) A lone widower freezes his dead wife in the hope of keeping her company into eternity, in this Taiwanese piece of slow cinema (with a social twist) - in the Official Selection of the 71st San Sebastian International Film Festival [Read More...]
The Rye Horn (O Corno) Maria has to juggle seafood harvesting, midwifery and illegal abortions, in this dark and visceral drama set during the 1970s in rural Galicia, Northwestern Spain - Golden Shell winner is in the Official Competition of the 2nd Mediterrane Film Festival, in Malta [Read More...]
The Beast (La Bête) Bertrand Bonello's drama about two would-be lovers bearing the same name is intellectually rigorous as well as stylistically dazzling, and perhaps his most audacious work to date - on VoD on Friday, July 5th [Read More...]
Puan Philosophy professor fights to preserve his position and his legacy, in Argentinean lighthearted comedy with distinct political flavours - from the Turin Film Festival [Read More...]