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Culture

  • Zero Point at the Barbican review: a visually stunning but eventually tiresome mash-up of ballet and Japanese butoh

    June 2, 2017

    For a while, Darren Johnston’s Zero Point is mesmerising: the bodies of a dozen or so Japanese dancers twist and warp as they contort through beams of light. Projections turn them into living blocks of static. At times they dance alone in the dark, your eyes only making out vague outlines of limbs. The audience, [...]

  • Into the Unknown at the Barbican: an anarchic journey through the world of science fiction

    June 2, 2017

    Into the Unknown: A Journey through Science Fiction is a brilliantly anarchic history of the genre, succeeding both as a surface-level crowd-pleaser and a rigorous collection that will give fresh perspective to even the most ardent of nerds. The curation takes inspiration from the blockbuster exhibitions hosted by the V&A – from the moment you [...]

  • The Treatment review: A darkly satirical take on the movie business and its players

    May 5, 2017

    The Treatment is a work of lofty, detached genius, reminiscent of the jostling intellectualism of Martin Amis – it's dense, complex, and utterly assured of its own brilliance. On face value, it’s about how the media – in this case, the film industry – edits and rewrites “truth” until it’s at best a distant cousin [...]

  • Sleepless review: A buzzing cast can’t rescue this low-rent Die Hard-alike

    May 5, 2017

      Universally recognised as the greatest film about clambering around inside air vents ever made, Die Hard has inspired a long list of distinguished imitators, each of them about crawling around inside different kinds of building. Among them was 2011 French action film Nuit Blanche, about a bent cop who gets tangled up in a [...]

  • Personal Shopper review: Anyone expecting a straightforward horror film will come out with buyer’s remorse

    March 16, 2017

    Personal Shopper puts so much effort into not being your typical supernatural horror film that it almost forgets it’s a supernatural horror film. It opens with a familiar scene, a young attractive woman (Kristen Stewart in this case) wanders around a scary old house, following the sound of dripping taps and creaky door handles. But [...]

  • My Country: a work in progress at the National Theatre review: a play that tries to make sense of Brexit

    March 16, 2017

    It has been said that our membership of the EU was too complicated a subject for a referendum, and this play – born out of a nationwide listening project – also makes the theatre feel inadequate when it comes to deciphering what the hell happened on 23 June. Each actor is assigned a region – [...]

  • Seventeen review: An exploration of the quirks of pissed up post-exam youngsters

    March 16, 2017

    Premiered in Australia and reproduced for the Lyric Hammersmith, Matthew Whittet's tale of smalltown British teens getting sozzled after finishing their A-levels is a gentle love-letter to the clumsiness of adolescence, as portrayed by a cast of middle-aged actors. The characters should be immediately familiar, from coming-of-age fiction if not firsthand experience – a prancing [...]

  • Secret Cinema returns with a belting rendition of Moulin Rouge

    March 16, 2017

    At the end of the 19th century, the Parisian district of Montmartre was a bohemian blend of aristocrats, artists, writers and dancers. Now you can visit the era without having to stray beyond Canning Town. You probably know the premise of Secret Cinema by now – watch a film and experience the world in which [...]

  • Beauty and the Beast review: This live-action remake loses most of the original’s magic

    March 16, 2017

    The timeless story of a girl who falls in love with her malevolent captor, a ten foot tall talking bear, Beauty and the Beast famously teaches that the man of your dreams is only ever a Stockholm Syndrome away. But while this live-action remake of an animated Disney classic leaves most of the hard lessons [...]

  • Get Out film review: A brilliant scary movie where casual racism is the unseen terror

    March 16, 2017

    In this Stepford Wives-style horror the unseen terror is casual racism and the insidious force is cultural whitewashing. And while that premise could easily descend into a liberal jumble of earnest back-slapping, Get Out is smart enough to balance its message with a wicked comic streak and some serious horror nous. It follows a young [...]

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