With unfettered access, The Accidental President paints a deeply human portrait of Belarus’ reluctant opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya.
The Accidental President. Strength Through Vulnerability.
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Exploring the Outer Edge of Film
Redmond is the editor-in-chief of Journey Into Cinema.
With unfettered access, The Accidental President paints a deeply human portrait of Belarus’ reluctant opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya.
A fat straight man finds a new lease of life when he sends his self-portrait into a gay magazine in Devin Shears’ touching debut Cherub.
A man’s grief-induced amnesia provides excellent inspiration for a journey through the past in Sara Fgaier’s powerful debut Weightless.
The ten-years-in-the-making Tezeta is a lively and fascinating portrait of Armenia’s contribution to Ethiopian musical history.
Puncturing through the noise of endless movies playing throughout the world with our selection of underseen 2024 festival favourites worth checking out.
The splendours of Parajanov, Neapolitan artistry and a variety of Armenian shorts show how art can redeem us and help us process past and present difficulties.
From refugees writing their own stories to a girl’s search for her mother turned fascinating metafiction, today’s Golden Apricot offerings rewrite the rulebook.
Whether you’re in Lithuania, Brazil or Benin, we all have someplace we’d rather be. Live from Golden Apricot International Film Festival.
The story of Armenia’s complicated suffering is laid bare in two stylistically opposite yet thematically linked films. From Golden Apricot Film Festival.
With a tight 1:1 ratio and an eye for arresting visuals, Windless sure looks great, but its grief-laden tale fails to hit with the viewer emotionally.