Monday, 1 December 2025

Sofa, So Good (Kyle Thiele/Eli Thiele/Cole Thiele, 2024)

An image from the film Sofa, So Good. Two men sit on a couch positioned outdoors on a grassy terrain.

Sofa, So Good debuted at last year's edition of the Cleveland International Film Festival and has since enjoyed no less than three screenings at the London Film Festival, where it received its European premiere.  Written and directed by the Thiele Brothers (Kyle, Eli and Cole), the film is a slight mumblecore comedy that follows the exploits of two Ohio cousins who, after purchasing a second-hand sofa, find themselves struggling to transport it home.  What follows is a monochrome trek across the cousins' hometown, in which a routine task escalates into a byzantine journey replete with frustrating incidents and oddball characters.


The film's premise is as straightforward as it is relatable, exploring themes of friendship, determination, and the inherent vagaries of life.  It tells a story recognisable to anyone who has taken on a simple challenge that unexpectedly snowballed into a labyrinthine ordeal, and the Thiele Brothers have crafted a tale that encourages viewers to see the funny side of the quotidian hurdles we all face—or at the very least, find humour in the ways in which we might attempt to solve such problems.  The film's conclusion, while thuddingly predictable, is as absurd as what has come before, and reminds us not to take things too seriously.


This amusingly titled film could also be viewed as a microcosm of life as a whole: is each of us, in our own way, heaving the couch across town, and if so, to what avail?  Set and filmed entirely in and around the rust belt city of Dayton, Sofa, So Good was made—with the barest of skeleton crews—during the 2020 lockdown; as such, its weirdly unpopulated streets add to the surreal, off-kilter nature of a movie that maintains the same low-key pace for much of its brisk running time.  While it certainly doesn't deliver a surfeit of laughs, this engaging throwback nevertheless serves as a sturdy example of pandemic-era indie filmmaking.

Darren Arnold

Images: BFI 

Tuesday, 25 November 2025

BFI Flare 2026 (18/3/26–29/3/26)

An image from the film Queer. Three men are sitting at a bar, with drinks and ashtrays in front of them.

The BFI today announced the dates for the 2026 edition of BFI Flare.  The festival, which screens the best in contemporary LGBTQIA+ cinema from around the globe—in addition to a rich selection of events and archive titles—is celebrating its 40th year and will run from 18th–29th March 2026 at BFI Southbank.  This year’s festival sees the 12th year of #FiveFilmsForFreedom in partnership with the British Council.  This landmark initiative presents five films for free to audiences globally and invites everyone everywhere to show solidarity with LGBT communities in countries where freedom and equal rights are limited.


The 2025 FFFF selections came from Indonesia, New Zealand, the USA/China, and the UK, and the digital campaign attracted over 3 million views.  Since 2015, Five Films For Freedom has showcased 55 films over 132 days, reaching audiences of over 28 million in 220 countries and principalities.  The 2026 Five Films for Freedom shorts will be available to watch for free UK-wide on BFI Player.  Submissions for all film lengths for the 2026 edition of Flare are now open, and will close on Friday 5 December.  Further details will be revealed in the coming months, with the full programme set to be announced in February.

Source: BFI

Images: A24

Friday, 21 November 2025

IFFR 2026: First Cinema Regained Titles Announced

An image from the film Tracing to Expo '70. A group of people standing inside an enclosed walkway are looking out of its large windows.

International Film Festival Rotterdam has unveiled its first selections for Cinema Regained, IFFR’s realm for rethinking film history, which will once again present recent restorations and works that offer new perspectives on cinema’s past.  Celebrating their world premieres at IFFR 2026 as part of the Cinema Regained programme will be Hungarian avant-garde master Péter Lichter’s The Thing in the Coffin (2026)—an appropriated footage version of Bram Stoker’s Dracula—and Ryan A. White and A.P. Pickle’s doc Mickey & Richard (2026).


Among the restorations featured, audiences will discover Tracing to Expo '70 (1970)—a dazzling mix of musical, travelogue and mystery, which looks at the first World Exposition held in Asia—and Gerald Potterton’s Tiki Tiki (1971), a crazy meta-movie featuring animated monkeys making a live-action Soviet-style fantasy epic.  Additional restorations will come from Brazil, Mexico and the Czech Republic, while further attempts at making new sense of film history will be provided by directors from Germany, France and Italy.


Vanja Kaludjercic, Festival Director at IFFR, said: "Cinema Regained reflects the way IFFR approaches cinema: by returning to works and histories that deserve a more attentive place in the conversation.  Cinema Regained continues to open up new ways of reading the past, presenting restorations, archival discoveries and experiments that shift how we understand film history.  This programme offers audiences a perspective that is informed, curious and grounded in the belief that cinema’s past remains essential to how we read the present".

Source/images: IFFR