If you’re looking for an antidote to last month’s sickening pro-war propaganda blockbuster American Sniper, you could do worse than the play Grounded.
D'Angelo | Florence and the Machine | A Northern Soul | Joanne Robertson
The Royal Academy is hosting an exhibition on Peter Paul Rubens. His art celebrated wealth and power in the face of Reformation, argues Noel Halifax
No Manifesto follows the career of rock band the Manic Street Preachers. It covers from the time that they met in school in South Wales to the release of 2009 album Journal for Plague Lovers.
All the tracks on the album were written or recorded by Frank Sinatra.
A new production of Arthur Miller’s play A View from the Bridge in Bolton brings Brooklyn’s migrant community to life, writes Dave Gibson
Staying power—Photographs of Black British Experience, 1950s-1990s | Flatpack Film Festival | Picked up, Patched Up and Sent Home—Why I Love the NHS
The film Selma depicts the events leading up to Dr Martin Luther King’s historic march from Selma, Alabama, to the capital Montgomery.
The new adaptation of Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall lives up to the hype and gives us an insight into the ferment of 16th century Britain, writes Sasha Simic
This tense science fiction thriller looks at artificial intelligence (AI) using just four characters –one with no lines – set in one location.
Whiplash and Birdman are two films that ask serious and relevant questions about the human costs of artistic achievement, writes Nick Grant