Film

The Last Great Wilderness

Meaty debut from Tartan Tarantino

Heartlands

Gentle, quirky follow-up to East Is East

The Happiness Of The Katakuris

Fantasy mayhem from prolific Japanese director

Pure

Fierce love and hard drugs in London's East End

The Leopard (II Gattopardo)

Charting the changes in 19th-century Sicily

Henry—Portrait Of A Serial Killer

Sleazy, nihilistic classic returns uncut

The Truth About Charlie

Pointless vanity remake of Charade

Bad Lieutenants

Lifting the lid on LAPD brutality and corruption

Do The Rustle

Nicholson and Brando face off in Arthur Penn's uneven western

Le Souffle

OPENS APRIL 11, CERT 15, 77 MINS Damien Odoul's debut feature is a coming-of-age film with a difference. Shot in black and white, full of violent and surreal imagery, it has more in common with the movies of Buñuel and Vigo or Arthur Rimbaud's poetry than with any conventional teen movie. Alienated teenager David (Pierre-Louis Bonnetblanc) lives on a remote French farm with his uncle. The older farm hands decide to get him drunk for the first time.
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