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  • Come back, South Africa: Africa in Motion 2014

    Three recent documentaries about the birth and growing pains of post-apartheid South Africa epitomised the reflective mood at this year’s Scottish showcase of African cinema. Harriet Warman reports.

    Harriet Warman
    Friday 5 December 2014

    Festivals

  • Playing the mule

    From Sundance to Copenhagen, festivals and funders seem to have caught the scent of cinematic nonfiction. Time to plant feet on the ground, says Robert Greene.

    Robert Greene
    Friday 5 December 2014

    Unfiction

  • From the Magazine

    Film of the week: The Grandmaster

    Wong Kar Wai casts his romantic and cultural reveries through a kung fu scrim in this long-awaited distillation of the life of wing chun master Ip Man, writes Vadim Rizov.

    Vadim Rizov
    Friday 5 December 2014

    Reviews and recommendations

  • Seeing plenty: women on film

    Sight & Sound must recognise the wealth of women making and commenting on movies, write two correspondents. Plus our response.

    Ania Ostrowska, Sight & Sound Editors
    Tuesday 2 December 2014

    Comment

  • An invitation is not enough

    Sight & Sound received the following response to our editor’s editorial The Equalizers, which invited more introductions and pitches from good female writers.

    Ania Ostrowska
    Monday 1 December 2014

    Comment

  • From the Magazine

    The equalizers

    Nick James on the ongoing search for more women in films, and in film.


    Friday 28 November 2014

    Comment

  • From the Magazine

    The 20 best films of 2014

    The best films of the year – the overground, the underground, the widely released and the still emerging, from oldtimers and first-timers – as chosen by 112 of our international contributors and colleagues.

    Sight & Sound contributors
    Friday 28 November 2014

    Annual round-ups

  • Screen painting: Randall Wright on his portrait of David Hockney

    With its access to David Hockney’s personal video collection, Randall Wright’s intimate study reveals “a more complex and serious” version of the famous British artist, he tells Michael Brooke.


    Friday 28 November 2014

    Interviews

  • British TV drama versus the world

    Is the UK television drama finally back to doing what it does best? Nick Edwards reports.

    Nick Edwards
    Thursday 27 November 2014

    TV

  • From the Magazine

    Film of the week: Concerning Violence

    Göran Hugo Olsson builds on The Black Power Mixtape with a richly dialectical archive essay intertwining Frantz Fanon’s writings on colonial violence and two decades of African liberation struggles. Ashley Clark looks on admiringly.


    Thursday 27 November 2014

    Reviews and recommendations

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