The Best (and Weirdest) A-List Style at the London Film Festival
6 Articles
6 Articles
No Other Choice (BFI London Film Festival) review - Park Chan-wook’s newest film is dark and bizarre but uniquely engrossing
Deliciously morbid in its humour, but hauntingly satirical in its thematic resonance, No Other Choice (어쩔수가없다), playing at BFI London Film Festival, rivets with its stellar visuals and sharp direction. The surge of popularity in South Korean cinema and culture (labelled Hallyu) is in part due to a willingness to hybridise. By combining various genres and influences, including those that transcend transnational borders, modern South Korean films …
Amanda Seyfried’s Richard Quinn Gown Divides Opinion at the BFI London Film Festival
Amanda Seyfried wore a striking black-and-white Richard Quinn gown at the 69th BFI London Film Festival premiere of her upcoming film, The Testament of Ann Lee, at the Curzon Mayfair in London. While she certainly made an entrance, I have to admit, the look didn’t quite win me over. Amanda Seyfried channels 18th-century elegance in a black-and-white Richard Quinn gown at The Testament of Ann Lee BFI London Film Festival premiere at the Curzon Ma…
2025 BFI London Film Festival Review – No Other Choice
Read the original post on Flickering Myth here: 2025 BFI London Film Festival Review – No Other Choice No Other Choice, 2025. Directed by Park Chan-wook. Starring Lee Byung-hun, Son Ye-jin, Park Hee-soon. SYNOPSIS: After being unemployed for several years, a man devises a unique plan to secure a new job: eliminate his competition. Park Chan-wook has proven adept at seamlessly flitting between genres over the past 30 years, from dark, psychologic…
Best of the fest: 9 of the best London Film Festival movies to book
Anemone, After The Hunt, Is This Thing On? and much more: The best of London Film Festival, and when to catch these films in cinemas No Other Choice Dir. Park Chan-wook No Other Choice is a sprawling, pitch-black farce that starts out as a corporate satire and morphs into something so singular and distinct I’m not sure we have a name for it. It follows Yoo Man-soo, a manager at a Korean paper company that’s just been bought by an American conglo…
BFI London Film Festival 2025: She’s The He - The Reviews Hub
Writer and Director: Siohban McCarthy Receiving its world premiere at this year’s BFI London Film Festival is Siobhan McCarthy’s feature debut, a trans high school comedy. Fast-moving and full of gags, this gender swap parody has its heart in the right place, but the constant wisecracks and the endless slapstick become wearying by the end [...] The post BFI London Film Festival 2025: She’s The He appeared first on The Reviews Hub.
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