Global culture calendar: February
A month packed full of stuff worth getting out of bed for.
A month packed full of stuff worth getting out of bed for.
The story of how two teen girls came to dominate the video-sharing app by dancing the Renegade.
Last year the London-based artist planted a phonebox in Dungeness, Kent for Brexiteers, Remainers and those in the foggy middle to leave anonymous messages for Europe. They’ve been collected and compiled into a film. Watch it here.
One is a non-binary musician, songwriter and performer, the other is a boundary-pushing filmmaker working in male-dominated industry. Together they’re making creative history.
Review: Fans of paperback teen fiction, Fall Out Boy and Conor Oberst will recognise the cloying tenor that characterises much of Weathering With You.
The photographic anthology featuring images from Larry Clark and BTS with Murakami, dropped on 29th January. Have a sneak peek of what’s inside here.
Review: Yuknavitch’s debut short fiction collection, Verge, is a study of characters on the margins of society – and reality – as we know it.
Help Tilda Swinton, Jeremy Deller, Wolfgang Tillmans and more in preserving the legacy of Britain’s influential gay artist.
Photographer Alexander Coggin gets up close and personal with RuPaul and your favourite on-screen queens.
Forget the looks yo-yoing up and down the runway, this is what people were wearing in Paris after dark when the shows were done.
The inspiring Oscar-winning and BAFTA-nominated short film that shows what it says in the title.
Musician and producer Surkin discusses his new zine GENER8ION – with entries from Matthew Williams and Keizo Kitajima – and a forthcoming “optimistic dystopian sci-fi project” in collaboration with director Romain Gavras.
Volume 4 Issue 2: The 25-year-old Canadian actor on making waves and making Waves.
The friends and family of Leanne Amaning, Paige Turley and Shaughna Phillips tell us who’s been hitting up their DMs (apart from us).
The stars of the beloved Seek Treatment podcast paid a premature visit to The Face House in Miami.
As it returns for a second season, the writer of Netflix’s hit comedy-drama explains how she brings her show – and her brilliant characters – to a climax on repeat.
The movie has made Academy Awards history as the first-ever Korean nominee for best picture. As Beth Webb finds, a large contribution to the film’s success, it seems, is a love for the director himself.
Forget Firth and Cumberbatch. Sam Mendes’s award-winning First World War blockbuster is all about the young actors on a life-or-death mission between the trenches – and Dean-Charles Chapman is the Essex lad leading from the front.
The White House Farm killings – which saw Bamber convicted of shooting dead his family at the age of 24 – were one of the most notorious British crimes of the Eighties. How does an actor prepare for that kind of role – especially when, 34 years later, the murderer still insists he’s innocent?
Volume 4 Issue 2: Kantemir Balagov is the rough-edged and rebellious talent behind Russia’s lesbian Oscar hopeful.
A month packed full of stuff worth getting out of bed for.
Volume 4 Issue 002: Meet the British actor starring with Scarlett Johansson in an Oscar-winning Adolf Hitler satire.
Volume 4 Issue 002: Writer Clare Considine discovers the rich history of Rastafarian Ital cuisine and shares her recommendations for Kingston’s vegan hot spots.