With Halloween on the horizon, we select some Scottish horrors to check out, including Highland-set werewolf film Dog Soldiers and art-horror Under the Skin
Edinburgh Film Festival will close with the world premiere of Since Yesterday: The Untold Story Of Scotland’s Girl Bands, directed by Carla J. Easton and Blair Young.
This year’s EIFF is made up of 37 new feature films, 18 world premieres, new films from Alice Lowe, Mark Cousins and Ben Rivers, plus Gaspar Noé in conversation.
Edinburgh overflows with bars of all stripes, from cosy pubs to sleek wine bars, and its coffee options are bountiful too. Here are some of our favourite places across town.
Where to Begin, the Festival’s opening event, will use George Heriot’s as its venue, turning the school into a vessel for a large-scale communal experience.
For its 20th birthday, Edinburgh Art Festival has assembled a programme of over 200 artists with a programme exploring the ‘conditions under which we live, work, gather and resist’
Summerhall will be bringing another eclectic selection of theatre and performance to Edinburgh this August, as well as some of the coolest club nights around.
GSFF is back with a sparkling programme including newly-unearthed Bill Douglas shorts, little-seen work from a Mexican feminist group, and subversive folk films.
Cat Power plays Bob Dylan, Amy Liptrot’s The Outrun is brought to the stage, and Stravinsky comes to the National Museum of Scotland – here’s a look at EIF 2024.
Perth Museum reopens with an exhibition on Scotland’s national animal, and six new commissions by queer artists exploring the unicorn’s LGBTQI+ significance.
Super-lean siege thrillers, magic-realist comedies, archive documentaries and time-travel romances – here are 10 must-watch films at Glasgow Film Festival 2024.