You can see through US agent Mason’s eyes as he is graphically tortured.
This stunning documentary follows Canadian singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen on tour in 1973—the one he claimed would be his last.
This is a merciless dissection of Obama’s overseas escalation and domestic retreat.
Book early to make sure you catch this revival of a brilliant pro-union, 1930s US musical.
Mark Twain remains one of the US’s best loved novelists, 100 years after his death. The writer of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court has been declared the "father of American literature".
Another Year, director Mike Leigh's new film, is about happiness and sorrow—and why lives end up full of one and not the other.
Dream Home, a violent Hong Kong satire, is pointedly set during the property market boom—just before the 2008 collapse.
Channel Four was right to commission a second season of Misfits, a darkly humorous tale of teenagers on community service accidentally gifted with superhuman powers.
Let Me In is a chilling and mature vampire film about two isolated, lonely 12 year old children (though one may have "been 12 for a very long time").
Set in the tenement flats of Glasgow, this production is a raw, emotional and funny portrayal of working class life during the Great Depression.
Born in Cuba in 1927 but settling in Jamaica at the age of 11, Laurel Aitken was dubbed "The Godfather of Ska", and he was the real pioneer of the genre.
This exhibition takes a fascinating look at the news and how it is presented. The artist, Damian Ortega, has taken inspiration from news items between 29 August and 27 September 2010 and created a physical representation of that time.