The acclaimed Melbourne Documentary Film Festival has arrived in the digital realm. Here are our selections for the top five:
Guillaume Pierret’s Lost Bullet is a wannabe Mad Max that takes in pride in flaunting its no-nonsense action movie tag.
The Truth is an impeccable and intimate view into the quietly tumultuous relationships between mothers and daughters and the shape they take into adulthood.
After a break up, a young woman decides to start a gallery where people can leave trinkets from past relationships.
Jaws is not only an eery reflection of the world we currently find ourselves in but a hopeful call to arms on how to work with each other.
At the center of Woo Min-ho’s The Man Standing Next lies a political scandal that has puzzled historians for decades.
Alex Lines spois with director Iván Castell about his latest music revival documentary The Rose of the Synths.
If you are in the mood for a light, funny, horror-comedy – heavy on the comedy – Useless Humans is something special.
Enter for a chance to win one of five digital copies of comedy classic Caddyshack at its 40th anniversary!
A man and his family embark on a dangerous journey as a comet hurtles toward Earth.
National cinema is a tough subject to broach. You may not have even heard of it before. Film Inquiry provides a beginners guide.
The kind of film that could only come from the mind of Werner Herzog, Family Romance, LLC is absolutely fascinating.
Ju-On: Origins may not reinvent the formula of the franchise, it still has enough stuff to give the audience a terrifying nightmare.
House of Hummingbird isn’t the easiest of films to watch, but it is definitely one of the most rewarding.
We take a look at the novel by Peter Tonguette: Picturing Peter Bogdanovich, about the famed actor, writer, producer and director.