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Featured image of A Simple Life

A Simple Life

A Simple Life tells the story of Chung Chun-Tao also known as Ah Tao, a maid to the Leung family for over fifty years. While working for Roger Leung, who works in the film industry, Ah Tao suffers a stroke, leading her to move into a care home. During the film, we see Roger’s memories Read More

Featured image of Take This Waltz

Take This Waltz

Sarah Polley’s directorial debut Away From Her (2006) faced up to the story of an ageing couple’s love undone by Alzheimer’s – it dealt in the corrosive effects of time. Take This Waltz is her second film, and tells of a young couple broken by choice – it deals in the causes and consequences of Read More

Featured image of Ahdaf Soueif

Ahdaf Soueif

Alamri: Bismilah. First of all thank you for granting me this interview in your house and thank you for this lovely food. Tislami [Thank you]. Congratulations on your recently published book, Cairo: My City, Our Revolution. Reading it reminded me of your first novel In the Eye of the Sun; I was struck by its Read More

Featured image of Rooster

Rooster

Although there are two “Suites”, of five and eight sections respectively, and a page-length prose poem (“West-Coast Colloquy”), the keynote of this volume is minimalism: short free-verse lyrics, many with short lines. It’s a common form in post-1960s poetry; one which hopes to imbue language with intensity through terseness, and invite us to focus on Read More

Featured image of The Kitchen of Lovely Contraptions

The Kitchen of Lovely Contraptions

Nominated for the Aldeburgh First Collection Prize in 2011, The Kitchen of Lovely Contraptions restores complexity, colour and light to a world which had turned fifty shades of grey. Jacqueline Saphra writes with disarming honesty about sex, control, femininity, gender roles and relationships. Above all, these are intensely personal poems. The first section on childhood Read More

Featured image of Keyhole

Keyhole

Canadian director Guy Madden has described Keyhole as his most narrative-driven film to date. In spite of this claim, the film frequently dispenses with the sort of narrative conventions that allow a plot to be followed easily by any audience. It is a film that combines seemingly disparate elements such as American gangster films, Greek Read More

Featured image of The Imposter

The Imposter

A young child goes missing. This is a headline that has appeared all too often in recent times and rarely with a happy ending. Cinema goers might have such a caveat in mind when they sit down to watch Bart Layton’s The Imposter. The film documents the true story of serial confidence trickster Frédéric “The Read More

Featured image of About Elly (DarbareyeElly)

About Elly (DarbareyeElly)

Following the overwhelming success of Asghar Farhadi’s Oscar-winning film A Separation in 2011, an earlier and much more quiet Farhadi film, About Elly, has now gained a UK release; and I am personally thrilled that it has. The plot revolves around a group of middle-class friends who reunite on a beach holiday which Sepideh (Golshifteh Read More

Featured image of Huracan

Huracan

Diana McCaulay’s new novel, Huracan, tells the story of her Jamaican homeland through three separate narratives, two of them historical and the third set – more or less – in the present day. The primary narrative is that of Leigh McCaulay, who returns to modern day Jamaica after the death of her mother. Alienated as Read More

Featured image of Ghosts

Ghosts

Families and familial relations are where feelings such as love, desire, anger, hurt, anguish, betrayal, guilt, frustration not infrequently reach a tipping point. The bonds that bind parents, children, siblings are so overdetermined that it often becomes impossible to think and see clearly, and even more so when their circumstances are infused with tragedy. Family Read More

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