politics
Sherwood, BBC One review - a traumatic journey through a painful pastTuesday, 14 June 2022![]() Renowned for an impressive body of work that includes This House, Quiz and Brexit: The Uncivil War, playwright and screenwriter James Graham has looked inwards and backwards for his new six-part series Sherwood.Set in a former mining community in... Read more... |
Album: Hercules & Love Affair - In AmberSaturday, 11 June 2022![]() A gothic aesthetic is very common in the left field of electronic/club music these days – but it tends to go with fairly extreme sounds: either industrial pummelling, or glitched-out “deconstructed club” as in artists like Ziúr.But Andy Butler... Read more... |
Borgen: Power and Glory, Netflix review - Birgitte Nyborg is back, more fascinating than everFriday, 10 June 2022![]() Has there ever been a smarter television series than DR’s Borgen? It’s regularly compared to The West Wing for its twisty interrogation of government shenanigans – and certainly it pays to get to grips with the coalition-driven political scene at... Read more... |
We Own This City, Sky Atlantic review - 'The Wire' creator David Simon is back on the Baltimore beatThursday, 09 June 2022![]() It has been 14 years since The Wire, David Simon’s labyrinthine epic about crime and policing in Baltimore, reached the end of the line. Yet it seems he couldn’t let it lie, because he’s back on the Baltimore beat with We Own This City (made by HBO... Read more... |
I Get Knocked Down, Brighton Festival review - Chumbawamba singer's film is lively, funny and thought-provokingThursday, 19 May 2022![]() One effect of the film I Get Knocked Down, a playfully constructed journey around the life of Chumbawamba vocalist Dunstan Bruce, is to remind that socio-political rage was once woven into the fabric of popular music. Old footage from the band’s... Read more... |
Album: Kendrick Lamar - Mr Morale & the Big SteppersSaturday, 14 May 2022![]() Kendrick Lamar is so breathlessly revered it’s sometimes hard to pull apart what’s going on in his records. It’s sometimes felt like he might become the rap game Radiohead: exploratory, aware, hugely technically accomplished, endlessly thematically... Read more... |
Anatomy of a Scandal, Netflix review - sex, sexism and the abuse of powerFriday, 15 April 2022![]() British political life in the Boris Johnson era routinely seems stranger than fiction, and this adaptation of Sarah Vaughan’s novel about a Flashman-style Tory MP should delight all those who view Westminster as a sewer of privilege, corruption and... Read more... |
Project Dictator, New Diorama Theatre review - anarchic satireThursday, 07 April 2022![]() When Rhum + Clay conceived this show, the idea of a comic becoming a political leader might have prompted thoughts of Boris Johnson's carefully cultivated buffoonery on "Have I Got News For You" and elsewhere. Since then, a certain Volodymyr... Read more... |
Bloody Difficult Women, Riverside Studios review - political dramaWednesday, 02 March 2022![]() Few critics become playwrights, but Tim Walker has done just that with Bloody Difficult Women, his debut. It's taking a risk; should any of his less generous critical colleagues wish to take a shot at the poacher turned gamekeeper, it's open season... Read more... |
Matt Forde: The Political Party review - topical stand-up and chatMonday, 07 February 2022![]() Nowadays, the jokes almost write themselves. As each new revelation of the Bacchanalia at 10 Downing Street appears (with much more to come, no doubt), political comics like Matt Forde must rub their hands with glee. It's almost as if he can just... Read more... |
Blu-ray: Rainer Werner Fassbinder Collection Vol 1Sunday, 06 February 2022![]() A man sits at a table in an otherwise bare room. Shot in monochrome and positioned off-centre, he reads a newspaper and smokes a cigar, lazily obscured as two other figures drift into and out of shot. A brief fight ensues. A man falls to the floor... Read more... |
Peter Robison: Flying Blind review – a story of decline and crawlTuesday, 30 November 2021![]() Thomas Pynchon’s saturnine '70s novel Gravity’s Rainbow (1973) begins with “[a] screaming [that] comes across the sky. It has happened before, but there is nothing to compare it to now.” In contrast, on 10 March 2019, when a Boeing 737 MAX operated... Read more... |
