Pump, an absurdist take on the classic road movie, is a film of many questions and few answers. What can it tell us about our relationship with the built environment? At the Open City Documentary Festival on 9th September 2017.
What happens when terror is a daily occurrence? On the war on terror's most violent and least reported front, for those disposing of bombs, daily life is a precarious balancing act. Film review.
Decades after the Khmer Rouge genocide, Cambodia remains a fractured nation with an untold history. An emotive new film, Angkor Awakens, tells this tragic story in full, and finds plenty of cause for hope at the end.
Generation Revolution follows the journey of Black Lives Matter activists in London, presenting a valuable new angle on the challenges they face in fighting for their rights on the streets.
This is a deeply important story that we’ve heard dozens of times in recent months, but the path to a healthier, more inclusive democracy remains unclear.
"Do we want to protect our democracy? Kids are born citizens, but they're not born with an understanding of democracy and how it works." Interview in the run-up to the World Forum for Democracy 2016.
The new film An Insignificant Man narrates the startling rise of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in Indian politics – a riveting story of outsider charisma and audacity confronting power and inequality.
Dieter Deswarte’s Saints transports us to a distant corner of the earth: telling a story of the global from the local. At the Open City Documentary Festival on 25 June 2016.
Anthony Barnett's Blimey, it could be Brexit! has provoked perceptive discussion among our readers. Here, we bring you the best of Blimey, below-the-line.