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  • The Ipcress File, episode 1, review: a sexy spy thriller with 1 short-sighted bit of casting

    Joe Cole's miscasting equally Harry Palmer aside, this adaptation of Len Deighton'due south novel, is atmospheric, cool and compelling

    Ipcress file review itv michael caine episode one
  • Peaky Blinders' toe-crimper obsession with real historical figures is its greatest vice

    Episode 2 of season half dozen gave united states a bit more Churchill and a lot more Mosley - and made us miss Helen McCrory all the more

  • How did Justin Welby's much-hyped grilling of Tony Blair fail to mention the word 'morality'?

    In The Archbishop Interviews on Radio iv, the old prime minister admitted his doubts about Republic of iraq simply wriggled out of difficulty like a pro

  • The Golden Cockerel, ETO, review: a terribly timed, unevenly sung fairy-tale nigh an invading tsar

    In this rare Rimsky-Korsakov opera, a dozy tsar orders a pre-emptive strike against a threatening neighbour. Information technology makes a very awkward evening

  • Why Putin is obsessed with Ukraine and Russia being 'one people'

    Putin pretends Ukraine is Russia's 'little brother' to justify annexation – but Kyiv was an independent metropolis when Moscow was just huts

Comment and analysis

  • Putin has learnt nothing from his beloved Soviet history books

    The Russian president is obsessed with the Second World State of war – but he's missed obvious lessons from Stalin's disastrous Finnish campaign

    Archetypal strong man: Putin on holiday in southern Siberia, August 2009
  • Why Putin is obsessed with Ukraine and Russia being '1 people'

    Putin pretends Ukraine is Russia'south 'little blood brother' to justify looting – but Kyiv was an contained city when Moscow was simply huts

    'An ancient and independent nation whose history goes back more than 1000 years': The Great Gate of Kyiv depicted in a stage design for Modest Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition, 1928
  • Philip Larkin deserves to be celebrated, not cancelled

    In his centenary year, why is the greatest English poet of my lifetime in danger of being erased?

    Philip Larkin in Westminster Abbey with his muse and mistress Monica Jones, 1984
  • Ben Whishaw stars in This Is Going to Hurt

Reviews

  • The Voids past Ryan O'Connor review: Shuggie Bain meets Loftier-Ascent

    Slapstick humour and social commentary collide in this debut nearly a Scottish alcoholic – but its drunken narrator becomes a piffling dull

    Book review The Voids by Ryan O'Connor novel fiction
  • Plotting heists, seducing manufactory girls: what did Stalin get up to in Stepney?

    The dictator never spoke about the months he spent in London as a boyfriend. Stephen May's gripping novel Sell U.s. the Rope fills that gap

    Book review Sell Us the Rope Stephen May novel fiction
  • Tonight with Andrew Marr, LBC, review: the vox is back – it just needs a little work

    Andrew Marr fabricated his LBC debut, following 21 years at the BBC, with a solid, if occasionally rushed 60 minutes of news and politics

    Andrew Marr at LBC
  • Yuck! This new biography of Carrie Johnson is absolutely enraging

    The writer's use of the phrase 'young lady' to describe the Prime Minister's married woman speaks volumes almost his antediluvian mindset

    Boris and Carrie Johnson on the last day of the 2021 Tory Party Conference
  • A assuming and beautiful Pixar blitheness nigh female puberty? Turning Cherry is exactly that

    This new gem is nigh a xiii-year-sometime girl who suddenly finds that at moments of extreme emotion, she transforms into a giant ruby panda

    Turning Red
  • The testify to make you fall in love with architectural drawings

    Sir John Soane's Museum's bijou new exhibition Hidden Masterpieces contains stunning works past giants of architecture beyond the centuries

    Giovanni Battista Piranesi, capriccio, c.1745-50​

Behind the music

Rock's untold stories, from ring-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time

Tonight's Telly

  • What'southward on TV tonight: The Witchfinder, Cricket: England v Due west Indies, and more

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

Screen Secrets

A regular series telling the stories behind film and Television's greatest hits – and near fascinating flops

  • Peaky finders? The Witchfinder is fun but the cauldron doesn't quite bubble

    Set in the 17th century, BBC Two's new sitcom boasts a summit cast and writers, though in that location's room on the broom for comeback

    Daniel Rigby and Tim Key in The Witchfinder
  • The Voids by Ryan O'Connor review: Shuggie Bain meets High-Rise

    Slapstick humour and social commentary collide in this debut nigh a Scottish alcoholic – only its drunken narrator becomes a little dull

    Book review The Voids by Ryan O'Connor novel fiction
  • Plotting heists, seducing mill girls: what did Stalin become upwardly to in Stepney?

    The dictator never spoke about the months he spent in London as a young human being. Stephen May'south gripping novel Sell Us the Rope fills that gap

    Book review Sell Us the Rope Stephen May novel fiction
  • How Jack Kerouac's dreams of being the American Proust were ruined past liquor

    Kerouac, who would have turned 100 this weekend, revered the nifty French novelist but was to leave a very unlike legacy

    Rebel icon: Jack Kerouac in 1958, after the publication of 'On the Road'
  • Yuck! This new biography of Carrie Johnson is absolutely enraging

    The writer's use of the phrase 'young lady' to describe the Prime Minister's married woman speaks volumes about his antediluvian mindset

    Boris and Carrie Johnson on the last day of the 2021 Tory Party Conference
  • What makes a 'good' war photo?

    From the First World War to war in Ukraine, photographs accept captured the brutality and dazzler of conflict. Only what makes an prototype last?

    Ukrainian soldiers in a defensive position in the north of Kharikiv
  • The show to brand you fall in love with architectural drawings

    Sir John Soane'southward Museum's bijou new exhibition Hidden Masterpieces contains stunning works by giants of compages across the centuries

    Giovanni Battista Piranesi, capriccio, c.1745-50​
  • Neil MacGregor interview: 'Why don't we have a Museum of England?'

    As he returns to radio, the historian and erstwhile director of the British Museum explains why museums are crucial to our identity

    Making a case for England: Neil MacGregor
  • 'I could make colours freak out': run into photography's answer to Jimi Hendrix

    In the Swinging Sixties, Karl Ferris'southward 'psychedelic photography' defined how we saw anybody from the Rolling Stones to the Beatles

    'It looks unique and spacey, it's just what we need': Kerris claims to have invented Jimi Hendrix's afro hairstyle

In depth

More stories

  • Peaky finders? The Witchfinder is fun but the cauldron doesn't quite bubble

    Set in the 17th century, BBC Ii's new sitcom boasts a top cast and writers, though there'due south room on the broom for improvement

    Daniel Rigby and Tim Key in The Witchfinder
  • How Tom Odell'south Another Love became an unlikely anthem for Ukraine

    The British vocaliser's striking carol has become a morale-boosting comfort blanket for many in Ukraine. Simply volition it make a difference?

    Tom Odell, the man behind Another Love
  • Bafta 2022 nominations: total list of Film Award nominees

    A full of 48 feature films have received nominations for the Baftas 2022 – merely when is the award anniversary, and how can you watch it?

    Bafta 2022 nominations full list of British Academy Film Awards nominees uk
  • Ed Sheeran has done no wrong – baseless copyright lawsuits are ruining mod pop

    All not bad popular songs share their DNA with many other great pop songs. Is it time the law called an immunity on songcraft?

    Ed Sheeran arriving in court for a copyright trial over his song Shape Of You in London
  • Best United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland music festivals for 2022

    Covid restrictions are no more and Glastonbury is back. Here's our pick of the best U.k. festivals worthy of your wellies this summer

    best uk music festivals 2022 guide dates
  • 'I've been mistaken for a groupie': how the music industry is still declining women

    The Uk music business is powered past chart-storming artists such every bit Adele and Dua Lipa. Then why are men in suits yet calling the shots?

    Dua Lipa, Adele and Little Simz
  • A plea to Hollywood: make Batman fun once again

    The latest Batman is so unrelentingly grim it makes The Dark Knight expect like Adam West. Why so serious?

    Alicia Silverstone, George Clooney and Chris O'Donnell Batman and Robin, 1997
  • The Voids by Ryan O'Connor review: Shuggie Bain meets Loftier-Ascent

    Slapstick humour and social commentary collide in this debut about a Scottish alcoholic – but its drunken narrator becomes a lilliputian dull

    Book review The Voids by Ryan O'Connor novel fiction

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