Reviews
True Detective: Night Country, Sky Atlantic review - death in a cold climateFriday, 19 January 2024![]() This fourth series of the erratic detective drama opens with an epigraph, attributed to a certain Hildred Castaigne: “For we do not know what beasts the night dreams when its hours grow too long for even God to be awake.” It sounds dark and creepy,... Read more... |
The Holdovers review - a perfectly formed comedy that wears its perfection lightlyFriday, 19 January 2024![]() Twenty years ago Alexander Payne put Paul Giamatti on the map in Sideways; here he is again, as another punctilious expert, this time not in the field of viniculture but plain old culture, of the old-fashioned classical kind. And his adversary is... Read more... |
Werner Herzog: Radical Dreamer review - the visionary director's extraordinary careerFriday, 19 January 2024![]() “It’s an injustice of nature that I haven’t become an athlete and it’s an injustice of nature that we do not have wings,” says German director Werner Herzog, aged 81, sounding characteristically intense.Who else, muses Wim Wenders, one of the many... Read more... |
Jekyll and Hyde, Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh review - audacious contemporary resonancesThursday, 18 January 2024![]() Evil walks among us. But it doesn’t arrive courtesy of mad scientists, bubbling potions and horrifying transformations. Instead, it comes from ordinary people surrendering themselves to their basest desires and resentments. Even worse, doing that... Read more... |
Kin, National Theatre review - heartfelt show makes its demands, but yields its rewardsWednesday, 17 January 2024![]() Waiting in the National Theatre’s foyer on press night, a space teeming with people speaking different languages, boasting different heritages – London in other words – news came through that leading members of the government had resigned because... Read more... |
Don't Destroy Me, Arcola Theatre review - a theatre history curioWednesday, 17 January 2024![]() British Theatre abounds in forgotten writers. And in ones whose early work is too rarely revived. One such is Michael Hastings, best known for Tom & Viv, his 1984 biographical drama about TS Eliot and his wife Vivienne, so in theory it’s great... Read more... |
Giselle, English National Ballet, Coliseum review - if you go down to the woods today, beware of the WilisTuesday, 16 January 2024![]() We’re used to the idea of 19th century ballets being updated, but the Giselle currently presented by English National Ballet takes it the other way.This production, itself more than 50 years old, offers the closest possible experience of a Romantic... Read more... |
BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Martin, Hoddinott Hall, Cardiff review - a host of horns in the wild woodsMonday, 15 January 2024![]() There were a lot of horns on display in the BBC NOW’s latest concert in Cardiff’s Hoddinott Hall. Brahms’s Second Symphony has four of them, and so does the Elegy for Brahms that Parry wrote on hearing of Brahms’s death in 1897. Gavin Higgins’s Horn... Read more... |
SCO, Ilias-Kadesha, Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh review - Eastern promise sputters outMonday, 15 January 2024![]() Violinist Jonas Ilias-Kadesha was placed front and centre of the publicity for this concert. This is his first season concert with the SCO, though back in 2019 he stood in for an indisposed soloist at short notice for one of their European tours.... Read more... |
Music Reissues Weekly: Mike Makhalemele & Winston “Mankunku” Ngozi - The Bull And The LionSunday, 14 January 2024![]() The Bull And The Lion was originally released in 1976 by Jo'burg, a South African label which opened-up for business in 1973 with a couple of singles and the first album by black singer Margaret Singana. Her debut LP was titled Lady Africa. The same... Read more... |
Elektra, Royal Opera review - moral: don’t wait too long for revengeSaturday, 13 January 2024![]() Those were happy days back in 2014 when, justifiably flushed with the success of the Royal Opera’s Tristan und Isolde revival, director Christof Loy, music director Antonio Pappano and soprano Nina Stemme mooted possibly the toughest role challenge... Read more... |
The Good John Proctor, Jermyn Street Theatre review - Salem-set drama loses some of its power in LondonSaturday, 13 January 2024![]() It is no surprise that the phrase “Witch Hunt” is Donald Trump’s favoured term to describe his legal travails. Leaving aside its connotations of a malevolent state going after an innocent victim whilst in the throes of a self-serving moral panic, it... Read more... |
