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Only 12% of films were directed and written by women and those of a marginalised gender.
‘The Brutalist’ posts excellent second weekend, remaining in top five.
Jason Reitman’s ‘Saturday Night’ and Mike Leigh’s ‘Hard Truths’ also launch.
‘The Brutalist’ took over £4,000-per-cinema for a strong opening.
Lionsgate action ’Flight Risk’ leads the way in 524 cinemas.
Holdovers ’Mufasa: The Lion King’, ’Sonic The Hedgehog 3’ and ’Nosferatu’ stand firm in the top five.
The total number of admissions last year was 126.5m.
Also out this weekend: Universal’s horror revamp ’Wolf Man’ and Curzon’s ‘Here’ starring Tom Hanks.
‘A Real Pain’ is also near £1m mark; as ‘We Live In Time’ thrives.
Robert Eggers’ horror has a strong £5.3m including previews, for the second-best post-pandemic horror start.
Win-win windows, National Trust inspiration - and an audience member throwing up.
The queer love story starring Pilou Asbæk and Egor Venned was set and was shot on the Faroe Islands.
Kneecap is the explosive hit of this year’s Baftas. Writer/director Rich Peppiatt and the band’s JJ Ó Dochartaigh discuss eight memorable events in the creation and release of the film.