Meet the next gen of Britain’s behind-the-camera TV and film stars
BAFTA Breakthrough has handpicked the industry’s brightest up-and-comers to nurture via their new-talent initiative. Remember these names. You’ll be hearing them a lot more.
BAFTA Breakthrough has handpicked the industry’s brightest up-and-comers to nurture via their new-talent initiative. Remember these names. You’ll be hearing them a lot more.
When it comes to reporting on drugs such as the so-called “monkey dust”, the press twists the truth and harms vulnerable people. We spoke to a substance use expert to get the facts.
“This movie is a two-hour-and-45-minute long tribute.”
In defiance of prudish algorithms, a new wave of silly selectors are heading to a good club near you.
A new show unveils previously unseen work by the cult Swiss shooter. He talks about creating portraits of friends and lovers, old Hollywood and turning ideas into action.
Cheap sushi, pastry platters and freshly-shot pigeon: food in Succession isn’t there to be eaten. Instead, it implies that where there is food, there is abundance and – crucially – money.
Photographer Mia Evans put on an exhibition-slash-rave celebrating the spirit of the city’s queer community.
The LA-based producer used Grimes’ Elf.Tech software to mimic her voice. After Grimes declared it a “masterpiece”, the song has become the artist's first official AI release.
Aries’ collaborative book with photographer David Ledoux and stylist Phoebe Arnold, Gnarly, is a hardcore summer dream.
As the groundbreaking drama anoints its ultimate successor, we quiz Lupe on spin-offs, Succession sleepovers and closing the door on the role of a lifetime. “It’s like getting over a big heartbreak.”
A Single Man: Five nights of sun, sea and sangria ends with delayed flights, unopened condoms, and a strengthened case for dirty British music festivals.
The multidisciplinary artist has just released A Sphinx Looking For a Poet, a collection of poems written in Parisian solitude that’ll have you lunging for the suitcase.
As Mindy Kaling’s Netflix series comes to a close, we turn the tables and challenge the actor to a round of the show’s titular drinking game (sans booze, sadly).
So much of cheating on screen is presented as flippant promiscuity or malicious deception – but in reality, infidelity rarely happens that way.
By day, they’re balancing spreadsheets and cooking up sales strategies. By night, they’re head banging to My Chemical Romance. Welcome to the dual life of corporate emos.
A recent study revealed that just one in 100 MPs come from working-class backgrounds. Perhaps this is why politicians can't wrap their heads around how to truly help the British public.
Thumbs down for the thumbs up. Shit luck for the happy poo. Nail in the coffin for the fresh mani.