Dan Reed’s new Channel 4 documentary One Day in October features moving testimonies from survivors including Emily Hand
By Eliana Jordan
The Netflix hit does a disastrous disservice to Jewish and non-Jewish women alike. It is nothing short of the Madonna-whore complex updated for our age
By Karen Glaser
This first feature by director and co-writer Noé Debré could so easily have ended up as a kosher kitchen sink drama. Instead, it’s a gem
By John Nathan
Love lives that turn out to be little less interesting for a show of two and a half hours
Cédric Kahn on his reconstruction of the 1976 trial of leftist Pierre Goldman – and the French judicial system’s prejudice against Jews
By James Mottram
The film director on why returning to his native New York inspired him to make a movie about how a family copes with grief
By Anne Joseph
Keren Nechmad's film Kissufim was shot three years ago before the kibbutz became the site of a Hamas massacre
By Jane Prinsley
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Ian McKellen’s stone-faced critic is a delicious embodiment of cruelty and wit
A film released this week tracks her astonishing story – and the cast of high-profile Jews who played crucial roles in building her career
By Melanie Abrams
The actor is on terrifying form in this film which uses poetic licence to excellent effect
Revenge is best served on a toxic male tycoon’s private island in this film which starts as a rom-com but which becomes a thriller
I talk to writer-director Nathan Silver about his new film Between the Temples, featuring a cantor who’s losing his voice and faith until his old teacher saves him
This comedy is based on the kind of ineffectual and hapless Jew that gentiles have long liked most, but it’s Jewish plea to live life to the full is one we can all get behind
Cliquot’s corporate story has been deemed big screen fare so I wish the film had dived into the mysterious alchemy of how the sparkling wine is made