Sister Midnight director Karan Kandhari: ‘I don’t know how, but we snuck this film through the British system’
An extravagantly original fable about marriage, bad housekeeping and some kind of vampirism
An extravagantly original fable about marriage, bad housekeeping and some kind of vampirism
The Academy Award can help move a director to the top of the heap – or make everyone involved lose the run of themselves and deliver a catastrophic flop
Australian creator of the Saw horror series talks about rebooting a werewolf classic and why he never thought Hollywood was his destiny
Television review: As a showcase for Colin Farrell, the series has its charms but The Penguin is hugely uneven and often extremely slow as a moribund script gets in the way
Amid the kerfuffle, it was somewhat lost that the second-biggest winner of the evening was Poor Things – a remarkable feat for an Irish production
Cillian Murphy wins best actor award at the Oscars after a remarkable night
Emma Stone wins best actress Oscar as Irish-produced Poor Things picks up four Academy Awards
Here are all the winners of the 96th Academy Awards - and all the nominees
The Oscars 2024 front-runner values his family’s ‘normal, lovely life’ in Ireland – especially as the glare of awards season has been ‘such a baptism of fire’
It’s shaping up to be Oppenheimer’s year at the Academy Awards. What about Barbie? And could Yorgos Lanthimos’s Poor Things also do well?
The Age of Cillian has firmly arrived, but past history tells us anything can happen between now and next month
Oppenheimer takes top Baftas as Irish-produced film Poor Things and Zone of Interest also triumph
Cillian Murphy remains on track to become the first person born in Ireland to win best actor at the Oscars
Were Barry Keoghan and Andrew Scott ever in the race?
The Irish star earned his first Academy Award nomination today, for his leading role in Christopher Nolan’s film Oppenheimer
Yorgos Lanthimos’s Poor Things scores a huge 11 nominations, a record for an Irish-produced film
Poor Things puts in a strong showing with 11 nods as Oppenheimer leads race with 13, but there’s no luck for other Irish acting talent
Bafta nomination system has rendered connections between the US and British academies less robust than was the case
Did Barry Keoghan edge out Andrew Scott? And might Paul Mescal’s chances at the Oscars be revived?
Cillian Murphy, Barry Keoghan and Paul Mescal recieve nods as Andrew Scott and Lily Gladstone miss out
Andrew Scott and Lily Gladstone, who were both hotly tipped for nominations, miss out in major upset
Price-conscious film fans made the most of National Cinema Day on Saturday with tickets available for just €4 across the country
Prize judge Catriona Crowe introduces How Far Can We Trust Science? by Shane Conneely
Despite setting post-pandemic box-office records, the industry is still struggling with an existential crisis that compares to the arrival of television in the 1950s
Putin’s implied threats to use fission bomb is a stark reminder of the madness of complacency
Blunt, who stars in Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, talks sexism, strikes and social media
The Light House cinema in Dublin and Pálás in Galway annihilate records with busiest weekends ever
The Irish actor talks Oppenheimer, sex scenes, self-doubt, hating school, and extreme weight loss
Actors’ strike may be blessing in disguise for Corkman, but Oscar buzz for his performance in Oppenheimer could force him out of his comfort zone
Does the character study of the father of the atomic bomb deliver as a meditation on deeply flawed anti-heros?
Not unlike its subject, the father of the atomic bomb, Christopher Nolan’s 12th feature is deeply flawed but brilliant
If the box-office projections are right, the battle between Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer and Greta Gerwig’s Barbie won’t even be close
Murphy, who stars in Nolan’s new film Oppenheimer, will be carrying a major film for the first time
Planet Business: Summer blockbusters, the man behind Nvidia and how people use technology on holiday
Let’s stick with the regular suspects, that way we’re sure to get somewhere near 50% right – right?
If you offered today’s cornucopia of readily available culture to any child stuck with one channel in 1970s Ireland they’d have clawed your arm off in gratitude
Contains spoilers: The soggy farewell season has unspooled like a series of baroque pop videos
Film review: There aren’t any gags, but this new iteration hits most of the right notes
Hashtag horror: US viewers to vote for #OscarsFanFavourite and #OscarsCheerMoment
‘I didn’t see myself as a personality. I see myself as an actor. I think those are two distinct jobs’
TV review: RTÉ made a song and dance about the show’s makeover and ‘super high tech’ studio
An Irishman’s Diary
Bryan Fogel discusses his ‘true-crime documentary’ The Dissident about the journalist
Ross likens his life to Heathcliff’s – especially when it comes to women
Moves have been made to support the exhibition and production sectors, but the challenges remain daunting
Fate of moviegoing after Covid-19 depends upon survival of large, indebted operators
George Clooney’s In the Midnight Sky and Jamie Foxx’s turn in Soul will have us curling up together on the couch again
Cineworld shut down ... Bond postponed again ... The cinema sector is on life support
Here is some kit to keep you from getting bored on these ever-lengthening nights
The notion of a re-set world is thought-provoking. Change, good and bad, is coming
Today is a giant step in the normalisation of the cinema industry in Ireland and worldwide
As Tenet arrives in cinemas, we judge how it compares with The Dark Knight and Memento
It has the makings of a gung-ho entertainment, but It’s hard to work out what’s happening
Disney postpones Mulan indefinitely and delays Star Wars and Avatar releases
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Inquests into the nightclub fire that led to the deaths of 48 people
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices