Martha Marcy May Marlene

Terrifying and beautiful, this might well be the best film of 2012.

Review: Acts of Godfrey

84 minutes of rhyming couplets? It sounds well annoying but I actually loved it.

Review: The Descendants

Nice film, shame about the voiceover.

Tinker Tailor Whack-a-Mole

There's a mole at the top of The Circus. Can you bash its face in?

Review: Like Crazy

A superb anti-rom-com that breaks some cliches and obeys others, which only makes it more moving.

Review: Shame

A devastating, magnificent film that trades almost solely in sex – and yet looks right through it.

Review: Coriolanus

Like Olivier and Branagh before him, Fiennes makes Shakespeare as gripping as it ever was. Verily, Voldemort did good.

If Newsreaders Did Shakespeare...

Inspired by Jon Snow's role in Coriolanus, here are some other Shakespeare adaptations starring newsreaders.

Review: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

After Benjamin Button and The Social Network, this feels like Fincher back in Se7en territory. Grizzled, haunting and beautiful.

Woody at the BFI

As the BFI's season of Woody Allen films continues, we look back at some of the director's best (and worst) films.

The Artist

A feel-good treat, pure and simple. You’ll swoon, you’ll sigh, you’ll want to tap dance.

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Tag:tahar rahim
Director: Jean-Jacques Annaud
Cast: Mark Strong, Antonio Banderas, Tahar Rahim
Certificate: TBC
Release Date: Friday 24th February

Under the unforgiving desert sky, two warring leaders come face to face. The bodies of their warriors litter the battlefield. The victorious Nesib, Emir of Hobeika (ANTONIO BANDERAS), lays down his peace terms to his rival Amar, Sultan of Salmaah (MARK STRONG). The two men agree that neither may lay claim to the area of no man’s land between them called The Yellow Belt. In return and according to the tribal customs of the time, Nesib will “adopt”- or take hostage- Amar’s two boys Saleeh (AKIN GAZI) and Auda (TAHAR RAHIM); a guarantee that neither man can invade the other. Years later, Saleeh and Auda have grown into young men. Saleeh, the warrior, itches to escape his gilded cage and return to his father’s land. Auda cares only for books and the pursuit of knowledge. One day, their adopted father Nesib is visited by an American oil man from Texas (COREY JOHNSON). He tells the Emir that his land is blessed with oil and promises him riches beyond his imagination. Nesib imagines a realm of infinite possibility, a kingdom with roads, schools and hospitals all paid for by the black gold beneath the barren sand. There is only one problem. The precious oil is located in the Yellow Belt.


Saleeh is killed in his attempts to escape and return to his father’s kingdom. The task of negotiating peace between the two kingdoms falls to young Auda. Nesib orchestrates the wedding of his beautiful daughter, Princess Leyla (FREIDA PINTO) to Auda. Though that union is borne of political convenience, ridding Nesib of his final obligations to his peace treaty with Amar, for Auda and Leyla their marriage is the symbol of a new beginning, a love that began in their childhood and the chance to shape the world around them. Auda is sent to Salmaah as an emissary of peace. Reunited with his father Amar, he discovers a new outlook on life, one based on devotion, piety and humility. His father offers him a seemingly impossible task, to cross the forbidding desert landscape of the House of Allah, along with his half-brother Ali (RIZ AHMED), as a decoy with nothing more than a ragtag army of thieves. The idea is to trick Nesib and allow Amar to mobilise his real army and conquer the kingdom of Hobeika. Through his journey, which is filled with many spectacular battles against rival tribes and clansmen and sees him free the beautiful slave girl Aicha (LIYA KEBEDE), Auda is transformed from a librarian into a leader.


The stage is now set for an epic showdown for control of the Yellow Belt, for control of the two kingdoms, for control of the future.

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Director: Jacques Audiard
Cast: Tahar Rahim, Neils Arestrup
Certificate: 18
Trailer

There's nothing like a violent French film. Especially when it comes to crime. Proving that resoundingly well is Jacques Audiard's latest film, A Prophet (Un Prophete), a hard-hitting piece of captivating cinema. Following the rise behind bars of North African teen Malik (Rahim), it's one of the most claustrophic character studies of recent years. Forget Mesrine's Killer Instinct: this guy's clever, resilient and he can see the future. That last bit is where it starts to fall apart.

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The nominees for the Orange Rising Star Award were announced yesterday as the BAFTAs gear up for the season. The award, which goes to young talent making their way in the glittery sky of Hollywood, is the only BAFTA to be voted for by the public. This year we have another tantalising mix of burgeoning starlets, some more established than others.


Carey Mulligan, who is already in line for a full-on Actress nomination thanks to An Education, is first out the gates, but she faces competition from Twilight totty Kristen Stewart (who has done other work, but most people don't remember it).


Her Adventureland co-star Jesse Eisenberg comes close behind with his curly-haired zombie-baiting brand of cute neuroses. Like Michael Cera but better, he tops rival Nicholas Hoult in the teen awkwardness stakes (although Hoult will soon be all manly in Clash of the Titans). Finishing off the pack is the dark horse of this year: Tamar Rahim, newcomer star of Jacques Audiard's A Prophet, with more sex appeal than a gritty ex-con Frenchman. Plus he's unafraid to cut a man's throat with a razor blade. He can act too.


Previous winners have included James McAvoy, Noel Clarke and Eva Green - tough acts to follow. But you get to choose this year's Rising Star. Head over to the official BAFTA site to cast your vote, right after you read on to look at each nominee in more detail.

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