Kneecap: ‘There was no word for cocaine in Irish’
Mo Chara, Móglaí Bap and DJ Próvaí, better known as Kneecap, (plus director Rich Peppiatt) give the lowdown on the creation of their raucous quasi-biopic, which captures the formation of their rap trio in Belfast and the ongoing fight to save the Irish language.
The post Kneecap: ‘There was no word for cocaine in Irish’ appeared first on Little White Lies.
Bye Bye Tiberias review – gets under your skin and stays there
Lina Soualem’s poignant new documentary traces the stories of four generations of Palestinian women in her family.
The post Bye Bye Tiberias review – gets under your skin and stays there appeared first on Little White Lies.
The Bikeriders review – a slow but enveloping saga
Jeff Nichols' drama based on Danny Lyon’s photobook about a 1960s Chicago motorcycle gang finally cruises into cinemas.
The post The Bikeriders review – a slow but enveloping saga appeared first on Little White Lies.
Back to Black review – a pointlessly cruel hash of Amy’s life
This miserable biopic claims to celebrate the life and music of Amy Winehouse, but instead serves as a ghoulish encapsulation of everything wrong with the music industry and fame machine.
The post Back to Black review – a pointlessly cruel hash of Amy’s life appeared first on Little White Lies.
Daniel Kaluuya and Kibwe Tavares: ‘Gentrification is hard to dramatise’
Old pals and creative collaborators Daniel Kaluuya and Kibwe Tavares team up to present their vision of a near future where London's last social housing estate stands up against the oppressive regime.
The post Daniel Kaluuya and Kibwe Tavares: ‘Gentrification is hard to dramatise’ appeared first on Little White Lies.
The Kitchen review – vindicating and explosive
Daniel Kaluuya and Kibwe Tavares' feature debut is a kinetic, prescient thriller about gentrification and isolation in a near-future version of London.
The post The Kitchen review – vindicating and explosive appeared first on Little White Lies.