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Culture

  • Bloodshot review: A below-average Vin Diesel vehicle filled with mindless chaos

    March 16, 2020

    Vin Diesel hopes to kick off a new franchise as superhero Bloodshot, a special forces operative killed in action only to be reborn as a supersoldier whose fractured memories begin to unveil a conspiracy. Diesel works best in an ensemble – even his signature Fast and Furious franchise only truly took off once bigger names [...]

  • Misbehaviour film review: Dramatisation of the Miss World pageant stormed by feminists lacks feeling

    March 16, 2020

    This glossy dramatisation of the 1970 Miss World Pageant in London, during which feminist protesters stormed the stage and covered host Bob Hope in flour, is intended to be a tale of heroism when viewed through a modern lens, but ends up playing things a little too safe. The story unfolds from several perspectives. Kiera [...]

  • Andy Warhol at Tate Modern review: A rare glimpse into the human side of this larger-than-life icon

    March 16, 2020

    Prior to visiting the Tate Modern this week, I was fairly sure I was over Andy Warhol. His legacy is undeniable; the contemporary art scene, particularly the one that children of the 1980s came of age to, would be unrecognisable without him. His body of work – more varied than he’s given credit for – [...]

  • Shoe Lady at Royal Court review: Surreal, strange story fails to sweep us off our feet

    March 16, 2020

    The IT Crowd’s Katherine Parkinson stars as Viv, or Shoe Lady, in E.V. Crowe’s latest piece at the Royal Court. The premise is simple but effective; lady has two shoes; lady loses one shoe; lady realises how much lost shoe stands for; lady tries to live without lost shoe but cannot. Shoes, of course, come [...]

  • Blithe Spirit at Duke of York’s Theatre review: Jennifer Saunders shines in this playful ghost story

    March 16, 2020

    Noël Coward’s Blithe Spirit is a merry supernatural farce, which the old boy hurriedly knocked off as a distraction from the beastly inconvenience of the Blitz. It seems appropriate that it should manifest again now, as the country stockpiles toilet paper and prepares to baton down the hatches, not against the menace of the Luftwaffe, [...]

  • Titian at the National Gallery review — Full-bodied masterpieces

    March 15, 2020

    There are just seven paintings in National Gallery’s new exhibition Titian: Love, Desire and Death, but they pack a punch. This is the first time these great works have been exhibited in the same room in their 450-year history.  Poesie, Titian calls them — “poetic pictures” inspired by Ovid’s Metamorphoses. Commissioned by a 21-year-old Prince [...]

  • Love, Love, Love at Lyric Hammersmith review: A witty, acerbic rumination on the generation gap

    March 13, 2020

    There’s a theory that, no matter how leftie and woke we might be in our youth, we all become Tories in the end. But how do we get there? That’s the journey we’re taken on in Love, Love, Love, Mike Bartlett’s three-act drama which picks up with a couple, Kenneth and Sandra, in 1967, 1990 [...]

  • The Thick of It’s Chris Addison talks about the limits of satire, the trials of being a parent and his new show, Breeders

    March 11, 2020

    He rose to fame as a stand-up comedian and became a household name playing The Thick of It’s hapless SpAd Ollie Reeder. Now, after a spell in Hollywood, Chris Addison is returning to British screens with his new sitcom Breeders, directed alongside Simon Blackwell and starring Martin Freeman. It’s a biting comedy about the sleepless [...]

  • Roddy Doyle: The beloved author opens up on growing older, Irish politics and why he’s still angry

    March 11, 2020

    Roddy Doyle is one of the most well known and beloved contemporary Irish authors. His work includes the Two Pints series and The Commitments, as well as numerous children’s books. We caught up with him on the eve of a new speaking tour. Hi Roddy. Your speaking tour, Conversations with Roddy Doyle, begins soon. Why [...]

  • Among the Trees at the Hayward Gallery: The life of trees viewed through the lens of the anthropocene

    March 6, 2020

    The first recorded use of the term “tree hugger” came in 1730, when a Hindu sect called the Bishnoi tried to stop the maharajah of Jodhpur from chopping down an ancient forest for materials to build his new palace. They died in their hundreds, clinging to branches as the army cut down first the Bishnois [...]

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