Wednesday, November 26, 2025

"My biggest thing with sex scenes generally is that they don’t feel like sex scenes, they feel like gestures towards sex" - An Interview with Harry Lighton

With Pillion, Harry Lighton has crafted one of 2025’s most eye-catching debut features. His adaptation of Adam Mars-Jones’ novel Box Hill: A Story of Low Self-Esteem stars Harry Melling as introverted and awkward traffic warden Colin, who is instantly besotted when he meets the taciturn, Adonis-like biker Ray (Alexander Skarsgård). The pair begin engaging in a BDSM relationship, with Colin finding a sense of purpose through his total devotion to his master’s needs, even as it's obvious that this naïvely romantic young man yearns for much more intimacy than Ray is willing to give. Lighton gives himself some tricky emotional and tonal territory to navigate here and he pulls it off with impressive sensitivity, humour and style, drawing exceptional performances from his two perfectly cast leads. On the morning of Pillion’s premiere at this year’s London Film Festival, I met with Lighton to discuss it.

You made a number of short films prior to this. How did you settle on Pillion as the project you were going to make the leap to features with?

Well, it wasn't the initial plan. I was going to make this film about sumo wrestling and I spent three years doing development on that, but then the pandemic happened and it became too expensive. I was sent Box Hill by Evie Yates and she said she thought I'd like it, probably based on the sumo film I'd been writing but also on my shorts, which have some transgressive sex and tended to have a bit of comedy in there as well. I read it and I was really intrigued by the tone of it, that was the thing which got me. I was like, "Oh, this has made me laugh but it's also made me horny and it's made me think," and those three things are interesting combinations to try and play with. The novel achieved a lot of that through first-person narration, and knowing that I didn't want to make a film with first-person narration, it seemed like an exciting thing to try and translate what I liked about that tone into visuals and action.

Your screenplay departs from the book quite a bit, so how did you approach the process of adaptation?

I knew that I loved the tone and I loved the central relationship, but there was stuff that I didn't want in my version of the film, so my initial approach – which I wouldn't recommend, and it was exhausting – was really to chuck it all up in the air. I moved the first draft to Ancient Rome and then the second was in a cruise ship, and then my producer said, “Get a grip, let's move it back to the setting at least of the novel.” I did that but then moved it into the contemporary period for various reasons, the main one being that if it was in the '70s, the explanation for Ray's mystery could much more easily be pinpointed to something socio-political, like legislation against gay people and the need to be secretive back then. I wanted there to be the very distinct possibility that Ray has chosen this way of living because it worked for his lifestyle and because it contained the erotic charge which is largely what he lives for. So that was one of the main reasons for updating the time period. But yeah, my approach to adaptation at the moment is unwieldy and scattergun, like, break it apart then put it back together, and fortunately Adam Mars Jones was totally happy with me doing whatever, whether he was going to be happy with the end product or not.

In terms of what you said about moving away from the time period and that requirement for secrecy, one thing that I liked about the film is that it's not a coming-out story. Colin is already out, and his parents are incredibly supportive, in fact they are actually his matchmakers and are desperate for him to meet a nice man. That was a refreshing dynamic to see.

Totally, yeah. There was never a version where there was any discussion about that. Personally, I'm just tired of seeing that narrative, and I thought it was interesting in this instance to go from the position of incredibly permissive parents to parents rejecting their son's version of gayness, because it's sort of the inverse of what you usually go from, parents rejecting their son's sexuality and then the arc is towards acceptance. I was interested in this question of, at what point do very liberal, very permissive parents say, "Actually your version of a relationship doesn't match up to what we think a good relationship is"? Where's the line between knowing what's good for their son and just mapping their own value systems onto him? Yeah, it seemed more original as a prospect to me.

Colin is a very open, heart-on-his-sleeve kind of character, but Ray is an enigma and he remains very closed off to us. What conversations did you have with Alexander about developing that character, because we see so little of his inner life?

None. It's true, none. The first thing we spoke about was how I didn't ever want to discuss a backstory with him. The things I wanted to discuss with him were all the practical aspects of what Ray did, what he had in his house, what leathers he wore and those kind of things. But while we didn't discuss backstory we did say, “Here's a moment where I want you to give us some interiority or give us some softness or something,” so there was a dimensionality to Ray's hardness. Again, there was never a version of the script where Ray explained why he was living in this extreme relationship structure, and I can't think of a version of that which would have satisfied me.

Did you explore this subculture and get a sense from people of what they get from this kind of relationship?

Yeah, for sure. I met a bunch of people and the strictness of their relationships varied, in terms of them being 24-7 or being more into doing a scene and then coming out of that dynamic, and it was interesting to see and hear the room for variety. Something which really stuck with me was meeting one sub who said they'd grown up feeling like they didn't excel at anything, and didn't have any status in the looks department, the social department or the intelligence department. In this dom-sub relationship, they’d found a way of feeling good about themselves because they were suddenly being prized for occupying the bottom rung of the hierarchy. It became a virtue. Rather than feeling like they were one of society's losers, it enabled them to make a virtue of what they felt to be their weaknesses, and I think there was something of Colin in that. Other than the barbershop quartet, he starts the film as someone who's without skills and doesn't have any obvious credentials, and then he finds a sense of purpose, so that definitely informed the writing of it.

That's interesting because with films like this, I find it hard to connect with the idea of the sub, and what people get from that relationship. When I was watching Colin’s first evening at Ray’s place there are all these levels of demeaning behaviour, and I found it so frustrating to watch him accept that. I'd never been able to fully comprehend what the sub gets out of that relationship.

I mean, I totally get why some people would watch it and think this is just degrading. For me personally, the idea of cooking someone breakfast to not get a thank you, that doesn't turn me on, but that said, I can totally understand why it would turn people on, particularly if you have desire for the person doing it. The fact that it's Ray, played by Alexander Skarsgård, who's telling Colin to do this, and Colin is someone who has possibly never been on a good date in his life, I think that creates a dynamic where you would suspend your usual your usual conditions. I guess there's a mutual responsibility in that you're doing some acts of service, but ultimately when Colin is with Ray, Ray is calling the shots, and I can definitely identify with the sense of freedom and comfort that comes from abrogating your own autonomy momentarily or permanently. You don't have to make choices for yourself, and that can be liberating for sure.

It's also notable that they just slip so easily into these roles and just go with it. There's never a proper discussion about what are the boundaries are or what are the safe words are, and that's where the dynamic can be abused.

For sure, yeah. It would be clear to anyone from the community, but it should be clear to everyone who watches the film, that this is not meant to be a model BDSM relationship at all. Ray is not a good dom. You know, he establishes some verbal concern in the first scene but there's no protocol established, there are none of the usual ways of safeguarding these relationships, and that's why I wanted to contrast Ray and Colin's relationship with some of the other biker-pillion pairs. You see this scene after they have the orgy and there's various versions of aftercare being exhibited, a lot of which are kind of tender and they're cuddling, and then Ray and Colin are sat apart and Colin's looking at Ray wanting a bit more. So yeah, I didn't want it to seem like I was offering up a blueprint for a relationship, and I wanted that question of whether Colin is being liberated by this or being abused by this to be a live question for the audience.

We should mention your intimacy coordinator, Robbie Taylor Hunt. Tell me about how you approach these scenes, because they are so integral to the film and I imagine it’s difficult logistically and emotionally to put these scenes together.

Yeah, I mean, there was a lot of time spent on that in the writing. For me, those scenes are the most interesting to write because you know that dialogue isn't going to be the catalyst to changes in action or in their dynamic. Trying to think of ways in which sexual manoeuvres or sexual shifts in status can create a shift in a character's mood or can tell the audience something about that character, I found that fascinating. So a lot of that work was on the page and then I brought in Robbie and we did a lot of work with the non-actors, all the bikers and people from the kink community, who weren't actors. Me and Robbie did a lot of work with them, getting them comfortable with the idea of the sex first, but also drawing on their own experiences to inform what they were doing in the sex scenes.

With Harry and Alex, their scenes have been written much more exactly on the page, so then it was just me, those two and Robbie going, okay, where can we add a detail here? How can we make the way Ray pulls out from Colin feel authentic? My biggest thing with sex scenes generally is that they don’t feel like sex scenes, they feel like gestures towards sex, which you get when you see hands clasped like this. That's why I told Robbie and the actors that we needed to avoid that kind of symbolism of sex and just get the clumsy reality.

That's the thing, because obviously you have to choreograph it very carefully, but you don't want it to feel choreographed, it has to maintain this awkward quality.

And Robbie's great at that because the way he works, it's very much not the “Right, move your knee here, four thrusts” kind of work. It's more like, let's map out the sex scene and then give the actors cues where they can trigger a shift in it. You're not just going “One, two, three,” you know, and I've seen those. It's an evolving art, isn't it, in terms of coordination. When I first started working with them it was more prescriptive and felt a little bit inhibiting, whereas now I didn't find it at all inhibiting.

Did you speak to any actors about these roles or their agents who were scared off by the content?

I spoke to some HODs [Heads of Departments] who were scared off by the content, but no, because Harry and Alex were the actors I wanted. So in this instance, no, but it's interesting because I have a friend who's just directed a film that had a queer narrative in it, but it was about a teacher shagging a 17-year-old. A lot of actors were unwilling to go into that territory, and it's a very different thing to what's going on in our film, but I think the fact that the sex in this is so extreme, or relatively extreme, it might liberate an actor who's worried about doing gay sex or something like that. It gives you permission to really go full throttle because it's the essential ingredient of the film, really. It doesn't have to be something which you worry about happening on this day and get nervous about putting it out there, because it's happening every other day.

I guess with a film like this you need to stay true to what the material is and not try to second-guess what the reaction is going to be on the internet or worry about how people will respond to things that they find weird or uncomfortable.

Yeah, and I did think about that sometimes. There was a super close-up of a bellend at one point and I think I took it out because I thought it's going to (a) make the audience laugh at the wrong moment in the scene, but (b) it's probably just going to become the image which defines the film. I didn't want that, absolutely.

How did you find the experience of directing a feature, as opposed to the shorts?

I found the writing a bit painful, because I'm a very slow, painful writer. I found the shooting bit fabulous, I loved it. I always found doing shorts painful during the shoot, but here, I had so many people around me, and when you direct a short you're also the car driver and all of that. I loved doing it over a longer stretch because you've got time to get comfortable with the actors, and by the end it felt very natural and easy. I was coming to work having slept the night before, which is good. In the edit, I worked with a great editor, Gareth Giles, but it was very long and anxiety-inducing, I didn't enjoy that. I didn't enjoy the psychological state I was in, but I've been lucky, because I was always told that producers-director relationships don't survive the first feature, and I'm still very good friends with both of my producers. I had a very young, eager, hungry team around me, and I'll hopefully continue to work with a lot of them. If I get to make more films I want to try as hard as I can to engender that same feeling of, “We really want to make this and make this great, and we all have stakes in it being good,” because it was such a fun set to be on.

You brought over some your crew from your shorts. Cinematographer Nick Morris is someone you’ve worked with a lot. What kind of conversations were you having with him about the look of the film? Did you have any kind of references in mind?

Yeah, obviously because I've known Nick for ages, we spoke about loads and loads. One reference which people probably won't see was Roma (2018), because there's quite a lot of slow developing shots, and there were more which we then cut up because of the pacing, but that camera language was a reference. Then there were a lot of photography references for the quality of light, I was really keen that the aesthetic didn't feel too varnished, it has enough of what I consider to be the real in it, so we looked at photography by Doug DuBois and all your usual documentary photographers. There’s one particular guy called Nick Waplington, who released this massive retrospective book. He's made Christmas scenes in particular, and the Smith house scenes were really influenced by his photography.

Do you know what you’ll be working on next?

I do, I'm writing a film for another director, I don't know if I can say yet who, and that's probably going to take me to the end of the year. I've got a new project with Element, which will hopefully be the next film I direct, and I'm going to write that early next year, so writing basically is the answer.

The part you hate.

I'm ready for that. Directing is wonderful, but I don't think I have the stamina to constantly be in the shooting, release phase of life.

And you like the idea of writing for other directors as well?

Yeah, I love it. I wrote a film for Oliver Hermanus, about Alexander McQueen, and that was my first experience of it, and I really enjoyed it. I found it a lot easier than writing for myself, actually.

Is the sumo wrestling idea over for you now?

Yeah, I think it’s too similar to Pillion. Sumos were here this week, do you know about that?

I know, at the Albert Hall. I was going to say, I saw the poster on the tube.

I felt like this is meant to be! It’s unbelievable. I'd forgotten how much I loved it, and also how electric it is as a spectator sport. There’s this weird dynamic to sumo tournaments, where it starts off so boring and gets more and more exciting as bigger guys come out, because it’s a bottom-to-top hierarchy, and by the end there's these 200kg guys just bashing into each other. But no, sumo sadly feels like it's dead in the water. Someone else can take that idea now.

Pillion is in cinemas on November 28th.

Friday, November 07, 2025

Roofman in Sight & Sound

The story is crazy but true. In the late 1990s, Jeffrey Manchester robbed dozens of McDonald’s stores across America, earning the sobriquet Roofman for his tactic of entering the stores by breaking a hole in the roof. Having received a 45-year sentence for his crimewave, Manchester broke out of jail and spent months hiding in a branch of Toys “R” Us while waiting for the manhunt to die down.

There are couple of ways a film adaptation of this story could go. It could be a broad comedy in the vein of Big (1988) about a man living every child’s dream – being locked in a toy store all night – or it could be the sad tale of a career criminal living in cramped isolation, cut off from his family and subsiding on M&Ms and baby food, while the net of justice closes in. In the hands of Roofman director Derek Cianfrance, we get a mixture of both approaches. The turn towards comedy is a surprising change of pace for Cianfrance, following the occasionally heavy-handed romantic dramas Blue Valentine (2010), The Place Beyond the Pines (2012) and The Light Between Oceans (2016), but he directs with a disarming lightness of touch here.

Thursday, November 06, 2025

Cinema Expanded: The Films of Frederick Wiseman

As someone who has long believed Frederick Wiseman is one of cinema's best and most important filmmakers, I am very excited to be part of this forthcoming BFI blu-ray collection. The set contains new restorations of five films from the start of Wiseman's long career, and I have written a new essay on his 1975 masterpiece Welfare, which is one of the great films of its era. It's so good to see Wiseman's films finally reaching a wider audience and these are essential works from an American master.

Cinema Expanded: The Films of Frederick Wiseman is released on January 26th, and you can pre-order it here.

Description
With a groundbreaking career spanning seven decades, Frederick Wiseman is one of the great American storytellers. His documentaries, shot vérité-style, are meticulously edited narratives chronicling life’s complexities through rich portraits of social and cultural institutions. Wiseman’s themes are expansive: democracy, power, inequality and community, to name a few; but his focus is compellingly specific and humane. Whether revealing shortcomings in social support or celebrating culinary excellence, he has a unique eye – and ear – for detail.

Representing their first release in the UK, this 3-disc / 5-film collection features a selection of Wiseman’s work made between 1967 and 1975, including Titicut Follies, High School and Juvenile Court.

The Films:
Titicut Follies (1967, 84 m)
High School (1968, 75m)
Hospital (1970, 84m)
Juvenile Court (1973, 144m)
Welfare (1975, 167m)

Extras:
Newly restored in 4K by Zipporah Films and presented in High Definition

Newly commissioned video essay by Ian Mantgani on the films of Frederick Wiseman

Frederick Wiseman: A Discussion (2025): filmmaker Andrea Luka Zimmerman and curator Matthew Barrington discuss Frederick Wiseman’s aesthetics and approach to filmmaking. Recorded at BFI Southbank, London.

Limited edition including a perfect-bound book featuring essays by David Jenkins, Eric Marsh, Stephen Mamber, Philip Concannon and Shawn Glinis and Arlin Golden, hosts of the long-running Wiseman Podcast. Also includes a 1986 interview with William Brayne (cinematographer on Hospital and Juvenile Court) and a 1974 essay from Sight & Sound by Thomas Atkins

Newly created English descriptive subtitles on all five films

Thursday, October 23, 2025

All My Sons on Blu-ray

Adapted from Arthur Miller's breakthrough play, All My Sons is a powerful drama that seems to have been largely forgotten but deserves to be rediscovered. It boasts one of Edward G. Robinson's best roles as Joe Keller, the businessman whose underhand profiteering during the war resulted in the deaths of 21 pilots, and a young Burt Lancaster showed his range after a series of crime films with his performance as Joe's son.

I was delighted to have the opportunity to write about this film and its release against the backdrop of McCarthyism, for a new blu-ray edition. The disc will be available to buy on January 26th 2026, and you can read more about the release here.

Irving Reis (The Big Street) directs a stellar cast including Edward G Robinson (Night Has a Thousand Eyes) and Burt Lancaster (Kiss the Blood Off My Hands) in the film noir classic All My Sons. 

Joe Keeler (Robinson) frames his business partner Herb (Frank Conroy, The Snake Pit) when a shipment of faulty aeroplane components leads to the death of several pilots. After the war, his son Chris (Lancaster) is engaged to Herb’s daughter Ann (Louisa Horton, Walk East on Beacon), and family tensions begin to rise... 

Adapted from the hit Broadway play by Arthur Miller (Death of a Salesman), and photographed by the great Russell Metty (Undertow), All My Sons is a fascinating exploration of betrayal and guilt.

INDICATOR LIMITED EDITION BLU-RAY SPECIAL FEATURES

  • High Definition remaster
  • Original mono audio
  • Audio commentary with critics and writers Glenn Kenny and Farran Smith Nehme (2026)
  • Screen Directors Playhouse: ‘All My Sons’ (1949): radio adaptation of Chester Erskine’s screenplay, starring Edward G Robinson, reprising his role from the film, and Jeff Chandler
  • Lux Radio Theatre: ‘All My Sons’ (1949): a second radio adaptation of Chester Erskine’s screenplay, starring Burt Lancaster, reprising his role from the film, and Edward Arnold
  • Original theatrical trailer
  • Image gallery: promotional and publicity material
  • New English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
  • Limited edition exclusive booklet with a new essay by Philip Concannon, archival interviews on the film’s production, a look at Arthur Miller’s original play, and film credits
  • UK premiere on Blu-ray
  • Limited edition of 3,000 copies for the UK

Friday, October 03, 2025

Urchin in Sight & Sound

In the opening scenes of his directorial debut Urchin, Harris Dickinson keeps us at a distance from his protagonist Michael (Frank Dillane). We watch from across the street as he trudges up to uninterested pedestrians in search of loose change, gathers with other rough sleepers at a soup kitchen, or seeks a relatively dry and safe space to lay down his cardboard and get some sleep. This distance is apt for a film about homelessness, a problem that many of us choose to ignore as we walk past it every day, but Dickinson gradually brings us closer to Michael, allowing us to see the insecurities and contradictions of someone trapped in a cycle that he cannot break.


Sunday, September 21, 2025

Great Expectations: British Postwar Cinema, 1945-1960

I was recently invited to contribute an essay to the book Great Expectations: British Postwar Cinema, 1945-1960, which was produced in conjunction with an extraordinary retrospective at the Locarno Film Festival. I jumped at the opportunity, particularly because I was asked to write about Basil Dearden, whose socially conscious films provide a vivid snapshot of the changing face of Britain as it emerged from the war, and whose work in general is severely underrated. I received my copy of the book this week and it is wonderful to be included in such a beautifully produced edition alongside so many writers I admire. The book contains essays on over thirty filmmakers plus overviews of the British film industry in this era, and it should provide an invaluable watchlist for anyone looking to explore this fascinating era of cinema.

The book is available to purchase here.

Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Caught Stealing in Sight & Sound

Caught Stealing takes place in New York’s Lower East Side in 1998. It’s a milieu that Darren Aronofsky knows well, as this is where he made Pi (1998), the imaginative feature that kickstarted his directorial career. Since that attention-grabbing debut, Aronofsky’s path has taken some unpredictable turns. One the one hand, he has established himself a filmmaker with a proven track record for directing actors to Oscar contention in modestly budgeted star vehicles like The Wrestler (2008), Black Swan (2010) and The Whale (2022), but he’s also been prone to taking wild leftfield swings in films like The Fountain (2006) and Mother! (2017); pictures that seemed designed to alienate as many audience members as they intrigued.

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Young Mothers in The Skinny

Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne established their reputation through their intense portraits of individual protagonists, but after splitting focus between two characters in Tori and Lokita, they have now made their most expansive film yet. Young Mothers introduces us to a group of teens living in a shelter for young mothers and mothers-to-be, and it’s the brothers’ first true ensemble piece. It’s also one of their finest films.

Thursday, July 31, 2025

Late Shift in Sight & Sound

Floria (Leonie Benesch) is exactly the kind of person you’d hope to see appearing at your bedside during a hospital stay. A dedicated and efficient nurse, Floria approaches those in her care with patience and empathy, providing a calming reassurance to the lonely and fearful. She remembers to bring lollipops for children visiting their mother, and she takes the time to sit and look at dog photographs with an elderly man who has no visitors, even if we can see in her face that her mind is buzzing with the countless other things she needs to be doing right now. In every respect, Floria is a model healthcare professional.

Thursday, July 24, 2025

Dying in Sight & Sound

Matthias Glasner’s Dying unfolds in five chapters and an epilogue, and the fourth of these chapters is entitled ‘Der Schmale Grat’ or ‘The Thin Line’. The line in question is the tightrope that artists walk between making work that is accessible to the masses while remaining steadfast in their pursuit of truth. Fail to hit that fine margin, composer Bernard Drinda (Robert Gwisdek) warns, and you’re left with nothing more than kitsch, which Bernard describes as the dismal result when “the feeling doesn’t reach to reality.”

The character of Bernard may be speaking for the writer-director, who spends three hours navigating a series of perilously thin lines and constantly reaching for a vivid sense of reality. When Glasner opens Dying on the sight of an old woman sitting in her own faeces while her husband wanders around half-naked and oblivious to her plight, the stage seems set for a pitiless examination of the indignities of old age, à la Amour (2012) or Vortex (2021), but his film moves in unpredictable ways which reflect the complex and contradictory nature of these characters. Glasner finds comedy amid the tragedy, and pathos in the mess of life.

Wednesday, July 23, 2025

Discussing National Gallery on the Wiseman Podcast

As a longtime admirer of the legendary documentarian Frederick Wiseman it was my pleasure to recently take part in the Wiseman Podcast, where I talked about his 2014 film National Gallery. This particular film is one I cherish, as it led to me interviewing Wiseman for the film’s release in 2015, and I enjoyed revisiting it for this conversation, which covered the film and how it reflects wider aspects of Wiseman’s career. The Wiseman Podcast is hosted by Shawn Glinis and Arlin Golden, who have created an invaluable resource in their film-by-film analysis of this great filmmaker. You can listen to our National Gallery conversation and find the previous 45 episodes here.



Sunday, June 22, 2025

Steven Soderbergh on Jaws

When I spoke to Steven Soderbergh about his latest film Black Bag earlier this year, we spent some time at the end of the interview talking about Jaws. It was such a thrill to see how passionate he was about this film, which has remained a source of inspiration and fascination throughout his entire career. With Jaws celebrating its 50th anniversary this week, Soderbergh's enthusiastic appraisal of the film can be read that the BFI website now.

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Black Bag in Sight & Sound

I recently had the pleasure of sitting down with Steven Soderbergh to discuss his low-budget ghost movie Presence, and a few weeks ago I was privileged enough to have a follow-up conversation with him. This time we were talking about Black Bag, his slick and very enjoyable thriller about marriage between spies, which is material tailor-made for Soderbergh's style and sensibilities. He is always a terrific interviewee and you can read my piece on him in the April 2025 issue of Sight & Sound, which is on sale now.

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

The Seed of the Sacred Fig

Mohammad Rasoulof’s The Seed of the Sacred Fig is a portrait of three women who live in the shadow of their family’s patriarch. The film opens with Iman (Missagh Zareh) being appointed as an investigating judge in the Revolutionary Court in Tehran; it's a role that will earn him a significantly higher salary and allow him to move his family to a bigger house in a better community. Iman has toiled as a lawyer for years and sees this as his overdue reward, but his more high-profile role comes with dangers. “You must be irreproachable,” his wife Najmeh (Soheila Golestani) warns their teenage daughters, Rezvan (Mahsa Rostami) and Sana (Setareh Maleki).

Read the rest of my review at The Skinny


Hard Truths

We’ve all had days when you wake up in a funk and feel like everyone was put on earth specifically to antagonise you, but that’s every day for Pansy (Marianne Jean-Baptiste), the protagonist in Mike Leigh’s Hard Truths.

Read the rest of my review at The Skinny

Monday, February 10, 2025

Presence in Sight & Sound

I had the great pleasure of talking to Steven Soderbergh about his latest experiment Presence, a small-scale haunted house movie in which Soderbergh, as the camera operator, plays the role of the ghost. You can read my interview with him in the March 2025 issue of Sight & Sound, which is on sale now.

Thursday, January 23, 2025

Spawn of the North on Blu-ray

I was very happy to be asked by Indicator to write an essay for their forthcoming blu-ray release of Henry Hathaway's Spawn of the North, a gripping drama about two lifelong friends who come into conflict over salmon poaching in Alaska. The film boasts first-rate performances from Henry Fonda, George Raft and Dorothy Lamour (not to mention scene-stealing work from a seal named Slicker), and Hathaway blends evocative location footage with exceptional effects work to craft some vivid and exciting action set-pieces. It's a terrific and hugely underrated film, and I'm delighted that it's getting the blu-ray release it deserves. You can buy Spawn of the North from April 21st.