BLOG / SCREEN-SPACE'S BEST & WORST FILMS OF 2020

Even in a year when all around them ground to a halt, filmmakers found the time to make some great and some not-so-great film. Guess which camp Robert Downey Jr.'s Dolittle sits in...? (Click here)
Even in a year when all around them ground to a halt, filmmakers found the time to make some great and some not-so-great film. Guess which camp Robert Downey Jr.'s Dolittle sits in...? (Click here)
Over two frenzied days of high-brow pondering, critic's bodies in Los Angeles and New York drew some lines in the cinematic sand with regard to who needs considering come Oscar time (Click here)
A feature-length documentary, virtual reality project and award-winning short will represent the Australian film sector at the world's biggest indie film celebration (Click here)
Filmmakers, musicians, artists, authors and the fans who love them are mourning the death of one of the loudest advocates for pop culture creativity, with Mike 'McBeardo' McPadden passing away (Click here)
A new independent feature from regionally-based director Victoria Wharfe McIntyre presents a version of the Indigenous experience never before seen on our screens (Click here).
No COVID-dictated move to online sessions was going to stop the North Hollywood Cinefest from presenting the best in global long- and short-form cinema (Click here)
After one of the most successful years in the club's history, Liverpool FC have earned the right to toot their horn in James Erskine's Merseyside love letter, The End of the Storm (Click here)
A transcontinental odyssey examining how four women handle the intricacies of contemporary relationships (Click here)
David Gregory's deep-dive love letter into a century of horror anthology cinema will leave you with a 'must-see' watch-list like none you've ever known (Click here)
He created two iconic villains within one of the greatest action film franchises cinema has ever known. Vale Australian industry giant, Hugh Keays-Byrne (Click here)
David Marmor's chilling, brutal pitch-black social satire hits Australian platforms and paints an even darker picture on the fracturing of US society than it did a year ago (Click here)
A whopping 110 films from all corner of the galaxy (well, 28 countries) are set to invade German homes with the Berlin Sci-Fi Filmfest heading online (Click here)
Visionary works from the U.A.E., Iran, Spain, Italy, Japan, France and Australia dominated the prize pool at the first annual Sydney Science Fiction Film Festival (picture, left; Denise Tantucci, Best Actress winner for Darkness) (Click here)
George Lucas, Alfred Hitchcock, Ridley Scott have all been placed under the filmic microscope of Alexandre O. Philippe. Now, it's William Friedken and his masterpiece The Exorcist that are dissected, in Leap of Faith (Click here)
He gave the world The Toxic Avenger and Sgt Kabukiman NYPD. Finally, Troma boss Lloyd Kaufman has made the film he's yearned to make his whole life. It is spin on The Tempest, with added whales faeces (Click here)