Filter By:
August 2022
S
M
T
W
T
F
S
31
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
Clear filter
Showing:
Showing:
Afire

Afire

In Christian Petzold’s Silver Bear–winning drama, a summer getaway on Germany’s Baltic coast unravels against the backdrop of looming wildfires.

Read More →
Short
AliEN0089

AliEN0089

Virtual and real-world violence blur in this terrifying, Sundance award-winning short.

Read More →
Short
As Filhas do Fogo

As Filhas do Fogo

Director Pedro Costa

Portuguese director Pedro Costa merges cinema, music and theatre for this tale of three sisters separated by an erupting volcano.

Read More →
Australia's Open

Australia's Open

Director Ili Baré

Relive the most thrilling moments of Australia’s beloved tennis tournament in this chronicle of its ascent to top-seed status on the global stage.

Read More →
Auteurs Abridged: New Shorts by Masters

Auteurs Abridged: New Shorts by Masters

Established feature directors return to the short form to play with time and experiment with structure.

Read More →
Autobiography

Autobiography

In this chilling political coming-of-age film, a young housekeeper is drawn into the sinister orbit of his influential boss.

Read More →
Best MIFF Shorts

Best MIFF Shorts

A collection of the best short films from the festival, as chosen by the MIFF Shorts Awards jury and the MIFF Shorts programmers.

Read More →
Short
Camarera de Piso

Camarera de Piso

Argentinian auteur Lucrecia Martel weaves economic struggle, thriller and diva melodrama into a stunning exercise in bodily language.

Read More →
A Couple

A Couple

Frederick Wiseman’s third foray into dramatic features centres on Sophia Tolstoy’s complicated marriage to her novelist husband.

Read More →
Creature

Creature

Oscar-winning Amy and Senna director Asif Kapadia fuses horror and expressionistic dance in this haunting ballet inspired by Woyzeck and Frankenstein.

Read More →
The Delinquents

The Delinquents

In this gently surreal, formally bold Argentinian take on the heist film, two bumbling bandits try to buy their liberty.

Read More →
The Disappearance of Shere Hite

The Disappearance of Shere Hite

Pioneering sexologist Shere Hite is rescued from history’s margins in this fascinating portrait from Oscar-nominated documentarian Nicole Newnham.

Read More →
Short
Endless Sea

Endless Sea

This account of an elderly woman’s nerve-racking journey across Manhattan is a heart-stoppingly sharp indictment of the US healthcare system.

Read More →
Goodbye Julia

Goodbye Julia

A moral thriller set against a nation torn in two, which won the inaugural Un Certain Regard Freedom Prize.

Read More →
Short
Heat Spell

Heat Spell

Tensions rise along with the temperature gauge in this blistering snapshot of sibling rivalry.

Read More →
Short
Human Nature

Human Nature

The winner of the Rotterdam Ammodo Tiger Short Competition’s top prize is a touching portrait of shared uncertainty.

Read More →
In Pursuit of Repetitive Beats

In Pursuit of Repetitive Beats

Hit the town and seek out the next illegal rave in this euphoric, multisensory joyride about the 1980s Acid House movement.

Read More →
International Shorts 2

International Shorts 2

An awarded and acclaimed cornucopia from directors known and new.

Read More →
Joan Baez I Am a Noise

Joan Baez I Am a Noise

Tracing her stratospheric rise, this portrait of the legendary folk singer and civil rights activist reveals a rich life not without its struggles.

Read More →
Keeping Hope

Keeping Hope

Mark Coles Smith (Sweet As) faces down a traumatic event from his past in the hope of helping young First Nations men in the Kimberley.

Read More →
La Chimera

La Chimera

A preternaturally skilled archaeologist goes on an Orphean quest for his lost love in Alice Rohrwacher’s latest and most romantically bewitching film.

Read More →
Medusa Deluxe

Medusa Deluxe

Scissors out! Someone literally slays at a hairdressing competition in this exuberant one-take murder mystery.

Read More →
Memory Film: A Filmmaker's Diary

Memory Film: A Filmmaker's Diary

Revered filmmaker Jeni Thornley (Maidens, MIFF 1979) composes an immersive cine-poem from her extensive super-8 archive spanning three decades.

Read More →
Milisuthando

Milisuthando

This poetic, visually striking meditation on growing up under apartheid in South Africa is unlike any documentary memoir you’ve seen before.

Read More →
No Bears

No Bears

In this gripping blend of fact and fiction, revered Iranian auteur Jafar Panahi (3 Faces, MIFF 2018) decides whether to cross a line for his beliefs.

Read More →
Perfect Days

Perfect Days

Director Wim Wenders

In this triumphant return to narrative film, Wim Wenders tackles life’s little details – mess and all – with his trademark meditative movement.

Read More →
Perpetrator

Perpetrator

Oozing blood, shapeshifting and a serial killer on the loose – this high school body horror is a feminist-charged frenzy, starring Alicia Silverstone.

Read More →
Robot Dreams

Robot Dreams

In this beautifully bittersweet hand-drawn ode to friendship, a dog must find new meaning when misfortune separates him from his robot buddy.

Read More →
Scrapper

Scrapper

A grieving girl connects with her estranged father in this Sundance World Cinema Grand Jury Prize–winning debut infused with warmth and light.

Read More →
Showing Up

Showing Up

As much an ode to the daily creative grind as it is to the creative partnership between director Kelly Reichardt and actor Michelle Williams.

Read More →
Short
The Silent Ones

The Silent Ones

Obstinacy and recklessness lead a team of fishermen out into dangerous waters.

Read More →
Sleep

Sleep

Director Jason Yu

Bong Joon-ho protégé Jason Yu’s clever horror debut stars South Korean favourites Lee Sun-kyun (Parasite) and Jung Yu-mi (Train to Busan).

Read More →
Smoke Sauna Sisterhood

Smoke Sauna Sisterhood

Director Anna Hints

In the southern Estonian woods, a group of women talk and embrace the soul-cleansing power of steam in this Sundance award-winning documentary.

Read More →
Squaring the Circle (The Story of Hipgnosis)

Squaring the Circle (The Story of Hipgnosis)

Music video auteur, photographer and Control director Anton Corbijn takes history for a spin, demystifing the vinyl record artwork of the masters.

Read More →
Stone Turtle

Stone Turtle

The supernatural encroaches on a woman’s simple existence in this FIPRESCI Prize–winning tale of folklore, deception and retribution.

Read More →
Stonewalling

Stonewalling

A Gen Z woman contends with shifting cultural values and the one-child policy’s lasting impacts to understand her place in the world.

Read More →
Short
Strange Way of Life

Strange Way of Life

Ethan Hawke and Pedro Pascal play reunited lovers in Pedro Almodóvar’s sensual queer western, direct from Cannes.

Read More →
Theater Camp

Theater Camp

Waiting for Guffman meets Wet Hot American Summer as a ragtag cast and crew of theatre nerds bring extra drama to save their beloved summer camp.

Read More →
This Is Going to Be Big

This Is Going to Be Big

A cast of neurodivergent teens prepare to come of age and hit the stage in their school’s time-travelling, John Farnham–themed musical.

Read More →
Short
Trailer of the Film That Will Never Exist: 'Phony Wars'

Trailer of the Film That Will Never Exist: 'Phony Wars'

From Cannes comes the final work by the late, legendary genius Jean-Luc Godard – a dazzling glimpse into a feature film that never came to be.

Read More →
Walk Up

Walk Up

Telling four stories (or maybe just one) over four storeys, Hong Sang-soo’s latest MIFF entry is a shrewd chamber play set within a single building.

Read More →
Werckmeister Harmonies

Werckmeister Harmonies

Director Béla Tarr

In this gorgeous new 4K restoration, Hungarian slow-cinema master Béla Tarr finds metaphysical horror in a nascent revolution.

Read More →
Short
Where do you stand, Tsai Ming-liang?

Where do you stand, Tsai Ming-liang?

Taiwanese master Tsai Ming-liang quietly contemplates life in the mountains, reflecting on chairs, cats and portraits of his muse, Lee Kang-sheng.

Read More →
You Can Call Me Bill

You Can Call Me Bill

From Star Trek to actual space travel, 92-year-old William Shatner has done it all. Alexandre O. Philippe beams us up with this touching tribute.

Read More →