An expose of the military-industrial complex shows how its actions grease the transfer of resources from the poorest to the richest globally
Will Stone was left pondering an incoherent outing
This weekend sees a unique celebration of cinema at Glasgow's Southside Film Festival
Although Y Lolfa was born in the mid-'60s and acted as unofficial printers to the then new, activist Welsh Language Society, it has become much more than a Welsh publisher.
The Canadian-born writer Jean McNeil spent three months with the British Antarctic Survey in 2005-6 and a few years later she visited Greenland with the Natural Environment Research Council.
The London Film Festval, now in its 55th year, opened with Fernando Meirelles's 360, a weak and pedestrian adaptation of La Ronde which centres on a series of encounters between people in different countries.
Star critics cherry-pick some of the best on offer in the weeks to come
Essex man Adam Neate's success is not necessarily because of his unorthodox working methods.
Next weekend, 20 years after the film director's death, Craigmillar Arts Centre in Edinburgh will be hosting two days of events to commemorate the life and work of Bill Douglas. The line-up includes an art exhibition, cinematic artifacts and screenings of Douglas's films and those of local children.
Actor Andy de la Tour on why a new Britain-Cuba arts initiative promises so much
Paintings by 49 British, European and US artists are on show at this major Tate initiative which includes work by Andy Warhol and Bridget Riley along with canvases by younger painters like Peter Davies, Francis Baudevin and Daniel Sturgis.
In 1973 the US poet Jim Scully won a prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship to travel abroad for a year.
This show purports to chart artistic responses to political transformations in eastern Europe. But, despite its good intentions, it makes one serious and deeply offensive error.