Thousands of votes have been cast, and more than 300 Australian features – fiction and documentary - have been named as audience favourites in Adelaide Film Festival’s global poll for the top three Australian films of all time.
Iram Haq's deeply personal film is harrowing, emotionally exhausting, constantly surprising, and flawless.
Palace Cinemas National Festivals Coordinator Alice McShane, is in her dream job.
The man behind both Leconfield and Richard Hamilton Wines has recently finished off his second documentary feature.
2018 Volvo Scandinavian Film Festival offers a range of incredible films this winter at Palace Nova Eastend and Prospect.
An articulate and unpredictable writer and performer, Greg Sestero's new work should cement his reputation as something much more than just "Wiseau's sidekick".
Author of The Disaster Artist, Greg Sestero, is in Adelaide tomorrow for a series of film-maker Q & As at Palace Nova Eastend.
The Incredibles and Pixar knock it out of the park yet again.
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, despite not living up to a higher theatrical potential, is still a T-rex sized blockbuster
Director and screenwriter, Andres Koppel, has spent most of his film and television career as a writer. But 2017 saw him make his feature directorial debut with Mist and the Maiden.
The Silent Revolution is equal parts a coming of age story and a snapshot of Germany in a time of fracture.
Hereditary is the must-see horror hit of 2018 which leaves its audience in shock, disturbed uncertainty and muscle-clenching tension.
The German Film Festival 2018 opens tonight at Palace Nova Eastend, with Berentzen cocktails, live entertainment and German delicacies.
Tully will take you on an emotional journey like no other, without a trace of sentimentality or cheap tricks.
This is a slower-paced documentary, but considering its gently nurturing subject matter, it appears well suited.
SuperSapiens will leave its audience in contemplation about humankind’s future and what sort of world we may be creating.
This film is a must see for anyone who found themselves standing shoulder to shoulder with their friends and strangers screaming their lungs out in unison in a concert in the 80s.
This is a work for lovers of Hockney, of art in general and of good documentaries. It is an astonishingly engaging piece of film.
Gurrumul is an incredibly expressive film that highlights the disconnect in aboriginal and western culture and the magnificence that was Gurrumul’s music.
Through the laughter and silliness is a sincere look at relationship dynamics and women in Spanish culture.