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Visit, or Memories and Confessions review – Manoel de Oliveira’s remarkable testament

The Portuguese director’s stately cine-memoir about his singular life was shot nearly four decades ago but withheld at his request until his death, aged 106

Souad review – teen life in the modern Middle East

Two Egyptian sisters experience the highs and lows of a permissive lifestyle in Ayten Amin’s sensitive drama

Streaming: The Father and other films about dementia

Florian Zeller’s heart-rending film The Father is the latest in a spate of recent works tackling the condition and its effects on the family

West Side Story, a Sopranos prequel and Bond: the best films to see in autumn 2021

Spielberg revamps Bernstein, young Tony is lured by the mob, Phyllida Lloyd tackles spousal abuse, Top Gun returns – and Daniel Craig calls time on 007 with bangs galore

Underground review – mine explosion disaster film digs deeper than most

French-Canadian director Sophie Dupuis puts human drama ahead of the action in this naturalistic, character-driven film

Wildland review – Sidse Babett Knudsen excels in lean, mean Danish drama

This tense thriller showcases Knudsen as a fearsome matriarch who adopts her orphaned niece – but not without a price

The Cloud in Her Room review – exquisite slow-burn study of a quarter-life crisis

Chinese film-maker Zheng Lu Xinyuan makes her debut with a dreamlike distillation of a young woman’s alienation from family and friends

Beasts Clawing at Straws review – jet-black comedy in arch Korean thriller

A long-suffering sauna worker finds a bag stuffed full of cash in a crime caper with perfectly pitched performances

True Stories: Spaces review – impressive short docs from folk horror to a Lebanese marvel

This short film collection from the True Story platform ranges across continents to look at how we interact with our environments

The Fever review – dreamy film about a mysterious illness in Brazil

Maya Da-Rin’s subtle, poetic debut engages with the hidden lives of the Desana people of Brazil

All Hands on Deck review – fresh and funny French holiday romance

A romantic surprise has unexpected consequences in a gentle comedy channelling Éric Rohmer crossed with Carry on Camping

The Psychic review – Lucio Fulci’s ravishing giallo thriller with nasty taste for violence

Jennifer O’Neill stars as a fabulously dressed clairvoyant in Fulci’s revived 1977 thriller that looks amazing, even if the sexual politics are dodgy

Teddy review – wince-inducing French werewolf horror

Ludovic and Zoran Boukherma show promisingly grim tendencies in a supremely confident horror that lacks a bit of thematic bite

The Most Beautiful Boy in the World review – devastating exposé of showbiz abuse

Luchino Visconti emerges badly from this desperately sad documentary about the exploitation of his Death in Venice child star Björn Andrésen

The Offering review – a sizzling Hitchcockian love triangle

A psychologist is forced to confront the fallout of a past romance in a neo-noir from Ventura Durall lacking visual punch

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  • ‘The original triple threat’: two exhibitions celebrate Marilyn Monroe as creative pioneer
  • ‘The original triple threat’: two exhibitions celebrate Marilyn Monroe as creative pioneer
  • ‘The original triple threat’: two exhibitions celebrate Marilyn Monroe as creative pioneer
  • ‘The original triple threat’: two exhibitions celebrate Marilyn Monroe as creative pioneer
  • Dracula review – Romania’s most reliable export becomes focus of knockabout cut-up satire
  • Dracula review – Romania’s most reliable export becomes focus of knockabout cut-up satire
  • Dracula review – Romania’s most reliable export becomes focus of knockabout cut-up satire
  • Dracula review – Romania’s most reliable export becomes focus of knockabout cut-up satire
  • House of Gloss review – tender portrait of a young trans couple finding refuge in new kind of family
  • House of Gloss review – tender portrait of a young trans couple finding refuge in new kind of family
  • House of Gloss review – tender portrait of a young trans couple finding refuge in new kind of family
  • House of Gloss review – tender portrait of a young trans couple finding refuge in new kind of family
  • ‘I still think it’s one of the great films of all time’: All the President’s Men turns 50
  • Monica Barbaro: ‘Yesterday I went home thinking I’m a terrible actor and they’re finding out’
  • Artemis II’s Jeremy Hansen calls Project Hail Mary ‘a real treat’ before his space mission
  • Mary Beth Hurt obituary
  • From The Drama to Malcolm in the Middle: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead
  • Justin Baldoni’s lawyer says defendants are ‘very good people’ as Blake Lively lawsuit narrows
  • Supergirl: the new trailer suggests that the DC Universe has an intriguing trick up its sleeve
  • Weapons to Sexy Beast: the seven best films to watch on TV this week
  • ‘It’s the year of gay Brazilian cruising!’ The makers of Night Stage on public sex and their ‘deranged erotic thriller’
  • Federal judge throws out most of Blake Lively’s claims against Justin Baldoni
  • ‘Curated chaos’: Danny Boyle on the ‘pop culture spectacular’ he’s bringing to London’s Southbank Centre
  • Killer rabbits, bunny boilers and the holy hand grenade of Antioch: Easter bunny movies – ranked!
  • Terry Cox obituary
  • ‘We got cancelled and we’re still here!’ Michael Patrick King on The Comeback – and why And Just Like That will age well
  • Fuze review – Theo James and Aaron Taylor-Johnson face off in head-spinning London heist
  • Why do this spring’s blockbusters feel so smug?
  • Deathstalker review – ludicrously enjoyable revisit of 80s swords-and-sorcery silliness
  • Bone Keeper review – there’s a critter in the caves in serviceable Brit horror

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