Neil Marshall’s nerve wracking, claustrophobic survival thriller about six spelunking women turns into a gripping horror film featuring the creepiest cave dwellers to skitter across a screen.
The meditative and metaphysical horror cinema of Kiyoshi Kurosawa made him one of the masters of modern Japanese horror. This haunting tale is one of his greatest works, perhaps his best.
Nicholas Winding Refn’s social commentary-as-heady horror film isn’t big on subtlety but his allegory for the hunger for youth and beauty is fascinating and gorgeous.
Ken Loach directs this touching story of childhood in a brutal coal town culture in the North of England, a film that is celebrated as a small cinematic treasure in Britain.
Lindsay Anderson captured the fancy of a generation of British youth with his savage satire of the regimented education system and bullying embedded in the culture.
Channing Tatum and Adam Driver star as hard-luck brothers who hatch a scheme to rob a NASCAR track in this bouncy, deft, sweetly and cleverly comic heist picture.