Matt Exton and Sean Lovell tell us about their recently released film celebrating the impressive, larger-than-life fundraising efforts of Sheffielder John Burkhill.
A good-looking, well-wrought, surprisingly snappy noir thriller not marred by the delusional exceptionalism that usually accompanies American movies about American atrocities.
Religion, colonialism, space-oil – this is big and serious stuff. And while Denis Villeneuve could never be accused of being too ironic, in Dune his earnestness finally works.
An engaging new documentary from Sheffield filmmakers Matt Exton and Sean Lovell tells the moving story of one man’s triumph over adversity - and his place in the hearts of the people of Sheffield.
My documentary will shed new light on the enigmatic underground musician, songwriter and actor who was briefly a member of Pulp. But who was Peter Boam?
The synopsis makes it sound like an arthouse parody of John Wick – but Pig is also a serious and meditative film about our relation to food, grief and each other.
Spinning off the wildly successful stage version of the coming-of-age story, Jamie comes to the big screen this month courtesy of Warp Films. The Sheffield-born director and choreographer told us more.
How did a cinema become owned by Sheffield City Council? The now little-known Anvil was a tangible cultural emblem of the Socialist Republic of South Yorkshire – and it laid the foundations for cherished institutions like the Showroom Cinema.
Day of live-scored silent films includes Man With A Movie Camera and Strike, with music from In The Nursery, Frame Ensemble and others, as part of venue’s centenary celebrations.