This is one of the most exciting, vibrant and enjoyable art exhibitions mounted in London for some time.
Peter Hain’s documentary on last year’s massacre of striking miners at Marikana, South Africa, shows the distress of a natural supporter of the governing ANC.
This is a four part documentary that follows prisoners in jail, on their release and for some who reoffend the return to prison.
Matt Damon stars as Steve, an energy company salesman who has to buy permission to drill for gas from struggling farmers.
Oblivion is Hollywood’s latest post-apocalyptic film and set in the year 2073.
My Daughter's Trial is an absorbing and fast moving new play, written by a barrister, Jabine Chaudri.
Guez’s photographs come from the work he began in 2009 creating the first Christian-Palestine archive in Israel.
To celebrate ten years of LMHR this exhibition of original memorabilia from LMHR and Rock Against Racism (RAR) is now in Scotland.
In the 1960s and 1970s some US prisons allowed inmates to form bands and produce commercially available albums.
Someone is killing fat cats. Three top Stockholm bankers have been shot in the head in as many nights and there’s no sign it’s going to stop.
It’s 125 years since the classic play Miss Julie was first staged. Now revived as Mies Julie, it’s an explosive cocktail of love and hate, says Brian Richardson
Cinemagoers across Britain will get a unique opportunity to see exclusive behind the scenes footage of the Royal Academy’s exhibition of Manet in this beautifully shot documentary.