Hints and tips:
...Like a great wine, The Taste of Things has a long, lingering finish. ★★★★★ In US cinemas now and in UK cinemas from February 16...
...The title Sometimes I Think About Dying is not obviously calculated to fill cinemas....
...Other challenges include strict contracts and tight timeframes: London fine jeweller Stephen Einhorn turned round a piece in about a week last month....
...“It was rare then to reference exploitation cinema and high art. It informed my aesthetic, without question. My absolute dream was to make a film and have it shown there.”...
...Cornette de Saint Cyr recalls how creatives gathered at Le Palace, a nightclub opened by Fabrice Emaer in 1978 in a beautifully dilapidated cinema....
...That has helped remind everyone just how supremely acquisitive Japanese companies and their founding families were back then, particularly when it came to fine art....
...Thanks to Kore-eda, so can we. ★★★★★ In UK cinemas from March 15...
...We are meeting at the Salon, the upstairs café of the Cinéma du Panthéon, a landmark Paris cinema that opened in 1907, a few doors down from the Sorbonne....
...Livestreamed in cinemas on February 7 starring Natalia Osipova and Reece Clarke...
...‘May December’ is in UK cinemas on November 17 and Sky Cinema on December 8 Follow @FTMag to find out about our latest stories first...
...“You’re not going to have the best food of your life here but it’s all fine,” he gently assures me....
...But cinema is also a sleight of hand....
...Those pieces became pawns in the rocketing editions market, a lucrative intersection of fine art and design where nothing was ever actually sat upon....
...‘The Taste of Things’ is in US cinemas from February 9 and UK cinemas from February 14...
...Wednesday’s cinema relay, skilfully directed by Ross MacGibbon, featured the symbiotic partnership of Natalia Osipova and Reece Clarke....
...Whether the style is restrained art deco, like Claridge’s or The Savoy, beaux-arts-Parisian like The Ritz, imperial striped pomp like The Connaught, or gothic fairytale like the St Pancras Renaissance, they...
...Jousset sees it as “a fine irony that the house of the dictator who hated art will become a house for artists”. There’s more....
...In common with her too, it works hard to hold on to optimism. ★★★★☆ In UK cinemas from January 19...
...The film helps set the record straight, and makes a moving portrait itself.In UK cinemas now Follow FTWeekend on Instagram and X, and subscribe to our podcast Life and Art wherever you listen...
...But then, in a year this turbulent, why would cinema be any less so? The secret of the movies’ place as history’s most productive marriage of art and commerce has always been mirroring the wider mood....
...‘High & Low — John Galliano’ is in cinemas from March 8 Find out about our latest stories first — follow @financialtimesfashion on Instagram — and subscribe to our podcast Life and Art wherever you listen...
...But for the designers behind them, creating fake brands that distil the essence of an entire fictional world while still being convincing is a fine art....
...Dedicated to Caribbean and diasporic cinema, it champions independent filmmaking and experimental and moving-image art....
...All of Us Strangers Two of Ireland’s brightest screen stars are paired to fine effect in the achingly melancholic All of Us Strangers....
...I’m no audio engineer, but I’m aware that Dolby Atmos is a thing — initially in cinemas, then in home audio from 2019....
International Edition