Book review of Glenn Patterson's The rest just follows, plus looking ahead to Season 2 of Boss coming back to Channel 4 and the 4th annual London Labour Film Festival
The acclaimed Calvary looks at a rotten institution in a sad and alienated world—and finds a surprising faith in humanity, writes?Sarah Ensor
Half a Yellow Sun film | The Sense of a Moment: Gianni Berengo Gardin exhibition | Modern Living play by Rowena Moreno
Noah is an epic fable of despair in the face of environmental disaster that takes liberties with more than just its Biblical sources, says Camilla Royle
The latest offering from the Kaiser Chiefs is an unexpected but refreshingly welcome poke in the eye—or the ear—of the British establishment.
Coal Not Dole: Women Against Pit Closures exhibition in Barnsley | Brick Lane photography book and exhibition by Phil Maxwell
London’s critics love musical comedy Urinetown for its satire—but behind the crude gags lurks a whiff of something nastier, writes Mary Brodbin
In the year when the union between Scotland and England could be consigned to history, Union looks at the events leading up to the momentous vote in 1707 that established it.
This sequel grapples with civil liberties, the threat of fascism, drones, and spooks.
Starred Up, a powerful film by a former prison therapist, exposes a barbaric world that breaks more people than it rehabilitates, says Antony Hamilton
Neneh Cherry has said Blank Project, her first new album since 1996, was the creative outlet she needed after the death of her mother. Cherry is known as much for her style as her hits. And she has not lost the attitude or confidence that in 1988 propelled her on to Top of the Pops seven months pregnant in a Lycra mini-skirt, exciting a storm of tabloid outrage.
This roller coaster of a play will have you crying one minute then howling with laughter a few minutes later.