Third Wave Water 12 Dose Pack Review

  • Chivalry, review: Steve Coogan stars as sleazeball in smart satire on Hollywood and sexual politics

    Channel 4's comedy-drama is a refreshingly mature and nuanced have on the post-MeToo film-making industry

    Steve Coogan as Cameron in Chivalry
  • Punchdrunk: The Burnt City, review: not quite a theatrical Trojan equus caballus

    This major new work by the immersive pioneers has some expert ideas, only lacks the surprise of their greatest work

  • Roar author Cecelia Ahern on why her stories aren't trying to start a gender state of war

    Ahern's stories, adapted for Apple TV+, include one nearly women refusing a human a vasectomy. But, she says, her work isn't out to blame men

  • Put your claws away, theatregoers – and give Jodie Comer a intermission

    The Killing Eve star's West Stop debut seems to be a hit with fans. But the transition from screen to stage doesn't always go smoothly

  • At the Venice Biennale, surreal joys are in, Putin is out – and the dried males are hanging on

    The 59th edition of the art extravaganza pays tribute to Ukrainian heroism while delving brilliantly into the weirder corners of our minds

Comment and analysis

  • Put your claws away, theatregoers – and requite Jodie Comer a intermission

    The Killing Eve star'due south West End debut seems to be a hit with fans. Only the transition from screen to stage doesn't always go smoothly

    Jodie Comer in rehearsals for Suzie Miller's play Prima Facie
  • Who would dare write a rom-com in today'south climate?

    Many classic cinematic romances would not withstand the scrutiny of today's idea police. No wonder so many recent offerings are anodyne

    Richard Gere and Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman, 1990
  • Stop attacking the Bullingdon Club

    Beefcake of a Scandal perpetuates a weary TV trope – the society for dim, violent toffs. The reality, as ex-members know, is no such thing

    Netflix's Anatomy of a Scandal depicts a suspiciously Bullingdon-like group
  • The BBC demand look no farther for the side by side host of Desert Island Discs

    John Wilson and This Cultural Life bear witness that the fine art of the interview is still alive and boot in some places on Radio 4

    This Cultural Life presenter John Wilson

Reviews

  • Marys Seacole: a challenging, fourth dimension-bending introduction to the other Florence Nightingale

    This frustrating, compelling drama at the Donmar boasts a fantastic lead performance by Kayla Meikle as a nurse who heads to the Crimean War

    Kayla Meikle as Mary Seacole in Marys Seacole, at the Donmar
  • Punchdrunk: The Burnt City, review: not quite a theatrical Trojan horse

    This major new work past the immersive pioneers has some good ideas, only lacks the surprise of their greatest work

    Inventive twists and turns: Punchdrunk performer Yilin Kong
  • At the Venice Biennale, surreal joys are in, Putin is out – and the stale males are hanging on

    The 59th edition of the art caricature pays tribute to Ukrainian heroism while delving brilliantly into the weirder corners of our minds

    In the Giardini is a temporary Ukrainian 'piazza'
  • Henry Half-dozen: the RSC is back with a show of strength

    Using a not-professional person chorus for this clear and compelling adaptation of Henry Half dozen feels intelligent, non gimmicky

    State of the nation:  Rebellion is adapted from the Second and Third Part of Henry VI
  • Welcome to 'Grange hell', in the well-nigh panic-assault-inducing film of the year

    'Playground' captures exactly what it feels like to be seven and starting a new schoolhouse, churning a microcosm of terror, feet and sorrow

    Maya Vanderbeque and Günter Duret in Playground
  • The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent is an unbearable waste product of Nicolas Cage

    Cage plays a literal version of himself in an action adventure that dismally fails to exploit what's so great about him in the first place

    Nicolas Cage in The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent

Behind the music

Rock'due south untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time

Tonight'due south Goggle box

  • What'southward on Telly tonight: The Rising, Earth Twenty-four hours, Heartstopper and more than

    Your complete guide to the week'due south television, films and sport, beyond terrestrial and digital platforms

Screen Secrets

A regular series telling the stories behind film and Telly'southward greatest hits – and well-nigh fascinating flops

  • Nicolas Cage's Face up/Off freak-out: how a deranged activity movie sent him over the edge

    To action aficionados, information technology's the one of the most thrilling, beautiful and ridiculous films ever made. But to its leading homo, it was all existent

    'Am I acting or is this real?': Nicolas Cage in Face/Off
  • Roar author Cecelia Ahern on why her stories aren't trying to start a gender war

    Ahern'southward stories, adjusted for Apple tree Tv set+, include one about women refusing a man a vasectomy. But, she says, her work isn't out to arraign men

    Betty Gilpin in the story The Woman Who Was Kept On A Shelf
  • The War on the West by Douglas Murray review: a 'nuclear answer' to attacks on whiteness

    Douglas Murray's latest polemic mounts a spirited defense force against antiracism and the Left's attack on the Western tradition

    Douglas Murray
  • Super-Space by Katherine Rundell: at concluding, the biography John Donne deserves

    The swaggering Elizabethan adventurer-poet has finally met his match – in Rundell's blazingly intelligent and witty life

    'I am the quintessence of nothingness': John Donne, c1595
  • Rotter or rapist? Anatomy of a Scandal's moral dilemma treads murky waters

    Netflix's adaption of the political thriller, starring Sienna Miller, about Britain's privileged aristocracy is a cautionary tale for our times

    anatomy of a scandal review netflix sienna miller political thriller
  • At the Venice Biennale, surreal joys are in, Putin is out – and the dried males are hanging on

    The 59th edition of the fine art extravaganza pays tribute to Ukrainian heroism while delving brilliantly into the weirder corners of our minds

    In the Giardini is a temporary Ukrainian 'piazza'
  • The Van Gogh of Kazakhstan who feigned insanity to escape the Soviets

    The state's first ever pavilion at the Venice Biennale plunges you into the eccentric world of Sergey Kalmykov

    Dreamer: Sergey Kalmykov
  • Sonia Boyce, British Pavilion, Venice, review: lacks the X-gene of genuine imaginative strangeness

    The British creative person's Venice show Feeling Her Way is gentle and tasteful, with an underlying electric current of social critique, but it doesn't soar

    Room 3 in Sonia Boyce's 2022 British Pavilion featuring performers Jacqui Dankworth and Sofia Jernberg
  • Anish Kapoor'south Venice sculptures are gimmicky but crackle with black magic

    The highlights of the artist's powerful new exhibition are some strange black sculptures made with his own licensed pigment

    'Kapoor black': the artist's mesmerising new sculptures contain a pigment that absorbs 99 per cent of light

In depth

More stories

  • Marys Seacole: a challenging, time-bending introduction to the other Florence Nightingale

    This frustrating, compelling drama at the Donmar boasts a fantastic lead performance by Kayla Meikle every bit a nurse who heads to the Crimean War

    Kayla Meikle as Mary Seacole in Marys Seacole, at the Donmar
  • Spiritualized stay psychedelic, Bob Vylan get angrily political – the calendar week'southward all-time albums

    Jason Pierce'south songwriting will enthrall fans, while Bob Vylan's will burn them up. Meanwhile, Fontaines DC offering a love letter to Dublin

    Cult British band Spiritualized return with their ninth album
  • Why teenagers are going to love this tender, mod-24-hour interval 'Romeo & Romeo'

    This Netflix adaptation of webcomic Heartstopper is a fresh take on the Grange Hill formula

    Kit Connor and Joe Locke star as Nick and Charlie in the new Netflix series Heartstopper
  • Nicolas Cage'southward Face/Off freak-out: how a deranged action film sent him over the edge

    To activity aficionados, it's the i of the most thrilling, beautiful and ridiculous films ever made. Merely to its leading human being, it was all real

    'Am I acting or is this real?': Nicolas Cage in Face/Off
  • What's on TV tonight: The Rising, Earth Day, Heartstopper and more

    Your consummate guide to the week's tv set, films and sport, across terrestrial and digital platforms

    Clara Rugaard as Neve Kelly in The Rising
  • What Netflix can practise to save its skin

    The streaming service is facing crisis point. Here are nine ways it can stem the exodus of subscribers

    Finn Wolfhard as Mike and Millie Bobby Brown  as Eleven in Stranger Things
  • Fontaines DC interview: Why don't you hear Irish accents on the radio?

    Grian Chatten – atomic number 82 singer of the all-conquering Dublin rock band – talks fame, ambition and identity

    Dublin's Fontaines DC (L-R): Tom Coll, Carlos O'Connell, Conor Curley, Conor Deegan and Grian Chatten
  • Chivalry, review: Steve Coogan stars as sleazeball in smart satire on Hollywood and sexual politics

    Channel 4's comedy-drama is a refreshingly mature and nuanced take on the mail service-MeToo flick-making industry

    Steve Coogan as Cameron in Chivalry

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Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/

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