Richard Hartley

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I Am Not a Witch review – magical surrealism

Rungano Nyoni’s debut feature, the story of a girl in Zambia accused of witchcraft, is comic, tragic – and captivatingly beautiful

Lecturers recommend: non-western cinema that every student should see

University tutors select the foreign films to watch for a new perspective on the world

Boy review – big-hearted Maori coming-of-age comedy

Thor: Ragnarok director Taika Waititi’s early paean to the strength and resilience of kids is tender and funny

Lost in La Mancha’s Jean Rochefort, veteran French actor, dies at 87

Rochefort, who scored a major international success in The Hairdresser’s Husband, was also cast as Don Quixote in Terry Gilliam’s ill-fated Cervantes adaptation

The Ornithologist review – from the sacred to the profane

Two Chinese girls rescue a drowning bird-watcher in this playful, increasingly surreal film

DVD reviews: Wonder Woman; Land of Mine; Chicken; and more

Patty Jenkins’s superheroine doesn’t quite strike a blow for women, while postwar German POWs face a new nightmare in a taut Danish drama

The Night Is Short, Walk on Girl review – a hallucinogenic trip down a rabbit hole

This weird and sometimes wonderful Japanese anime is about a student on a kaleidoscopic all-night quest to find a treasured children’s book

The Ornithologist review – beautiful, erotic and baffling meditation on faith

This dreamy, seductive and playful retelling of the life of St Anthony of Padua, set in a jungle in northern Portugal, recalls the work of Apichatpong Weerasethakul

The Road to Mandalay review – potent migrant drama

This story of a young Burmese couple fleeing to Thailand is full of touching details

Zoology review – defiantly weird

This eccentric story of a Russian zookeeper who grows a tail is let down by a humdrum ending

Zoology review – woman grows a tail in sparky Russian satire

A zoo-worker’s unexpected new addition triggers an affair in this fable about conformity, reactionary sexual politics and religious fervour

The Road to Mandalay review – intensely moving drama about Burmese migrants

Midi Z offers no happy endings in this compassionate, ripped-from-the-headlines story about a couple determined to make a better life in Thailand

In Between review – the struggle of free spirits trying to fly

Three female flatmates in Tel Aviv fight the constraints of their Muslim faith and families in an inspiring directorial debut

Tramontane review – musical road trip untangles trauma of Lebanese civil war

Vatche Boulghourjian was selected for Cannes’ Critics’ Week for this meandering mystery about a blind musician who discovers that his childhood was a lie

In Between review – flatmates crash the cultural boundaries

Three women from Muslim and Christian backgrounds bond over hummus and history in a delightful drama set in Tel Aviv

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About

  • About Richard Hartley
  • Richard Hartley’s Work
  • Location

Film & Tech News

  • ‘Once my tummy stopped shaking, I was absorbed by the scale, spectacle and wonder’: your Steven Spielberg film favourites
  • Key Trump allies and Musk on leaked list for secretive Peter Thiel retreat
  • ‘How do I deal with my rage? I put it in everything I do’: Killing Eve’s Sandra Oh on fury, friendship and hitting her prime in midlife
  • Social media bans are trending. But it’s too late for my son and me
  • Skeleton of the world’s rarest marine mammal preserved by digital imaging
  • A viral doomsday scenario aims to shake Europe out of its AI complacency
  • Granta stops publishing short story award winners over AI controversy
  • From Toy Story 5 to The Bear: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead
  • I dived into my digital past to revisit my most cringe teenage moments – and realised how lucky I am to not be young and online today
  • Can we electrify the world? Ambition moves from nerdish backwater to centre stage
  • The Guardian view on John Williams and Steven Spielberg: a partnership that changed cinema
  • The Rev Michael Humphreys obituary
  • 45 Years review – Gabriel Byrne and Geraldine James mark an anniversary for the ages
  • How Refugee Week film festival brings migrants’ experience home
  • The best 4K wireless TV streamers for more choice – with no aerial required
  • The UK’s social media ban for under-16s has just empowered big tech
  • Luca Guadagnino’s Sam Altman movie dropped by Amazon after it announces OpenAI partnership
  • Read a book? Join a club? Stare at a wall? Social media alternatives for under-16s
  • ‘It’s a scam’: Americans express unease over SpaceX’s influence on retirement savings
  • Bologna’s niche festival of forgotten films captures the streaming generation
  • Anya Taylor-Joy will make a brilliant elf assassin in Hunt for Gollum. But it’s a movie we don’t need
  • Jennifer Siebel Newsom’s new film shines a light on the human cost of unregulated social media
  • Avatar: Fire and Ash to Project Hail Mary – the seven best films to watch on TV this week
  • You can handle the truth! Why cinema suddenly loves conspiracy theories
  • On the trail of the dotcom queen: how Julie Meyer left a pattern of unpaid bills, missing funds and broken dreams in her wake
  • Telegram questioned by Ofcom after arsonist who targeted Starmer-linked properties recruited on app
  • In the Hand of Dante review – Gerard Butler is jaw-dropping in bizarre Renaissance mafia reverie
  • The Crunch: Climate refugees, visualising Elon Musk’s wealth, and the many ways to analyse the World Cup
  • California ‘billionaire tax’ makes ballot despite opposition from tech moguls
  • Voicemails for Isabelle review – Netflix romcom picks creepy over cute

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