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Culture

  • The Libertine at Theatre Royal Haymarket starring Dominic Cooper fails to deliver on its salacious promises

    September 29, 2016

    The Libertine begins with a promise. Dominic Cooper, as Restoration rake the Earl of Rochester, delivers a swaggering prologue, directly informing the audience that although they may like some of what he does, they will not like him. This speech is an implicit bargain; that he will behave appallingly, and the audience will be thrilled [...]

  • Floyd Collins at Wilton’s Music Hall review: clever staging and a strong cast can’t mask this poor musical

    September 29, 2016

    Floyd Collins is a musical about a man stuck in a hole, and there were moments during this production that I felt like I was down there with him, waiting interminably in the darkness for the sweet release of death. Despite a strong cast and clever staging, exceptionally poor pacing makes Adam Guettel’s musical – [...]

  • Interview: Comedian Peter Serafinowicz on his horrifying, mesmerising Sassy Trump creation

    September 29, 2016

    When Donald Trump kicked a crying baby out of one his rallies, Peter Serafinowicz rubbed his hands together and got to work. The comedian’s latest project, a YouTube series called Sassy Trump, takes the Republican nominee’s actual words and redubs them in a sassy voice that perfectly matches the man’s curiously effete mannerisms – his [...]

  • Swiss Army Man review: Daniel Radcliffe dumps over his wizard legacy from the greatest possible height

    September 29, 2016

    The first thing Daniel Radcliffe did after he finished being Harry Potter was flash his junk in Equus, and ever since then he’s been upping the ante, scaling ever greater heights from whence he can shit on his wizarding legacy. He played a jerk version of himself in BoJack Horseman, he threw Nazi salutes in [...]

  • Cache of paintings by mysterious artist who shunned fame to go on display for first time

    September 28, 2016

    In the late 1950s, Keith Cunningham was one of the art world’s brightest stars. Critics praised him, galleries vied to show his work, and like his Royal College of Art contemporaries Frank Auerbach and Leon Kossoff, he seemed set for a brilliant career. Then one day, he stopped exhibiting. Cunningham died in 2014, aged 85, [...]

  • Ember game on iOS is a brilliant Diablo type RPG that delivers Stranger Things-levels of nostalgia

    September 28, 2016

    There is nothing in the slightest bit original about Ember and that is its greatest asset. It’s a dose of nostalgia as intense and satisfying as Stranger Things, aimed at a generation who grew up playing Tolkien-esque swords and sorcery games. It weaves together a tapestry of cliches so pronounced it feels as warm and [...]

  • Forza Horizon 3 is both a petrol head’s and arcade fan’s dream

    September 28, 2016

    Whether you’re into classic muscle cars, retro rally, or just want to zoom about in a souped-up Ferrari, Forza Horizon 3 is a glorious celebration of racing at its purest. Following its excellent predecessor, developer Playground Games has raised the stakes, somehow breathing even more life into its already robust open-world racing formula. This time [...]

  • Destiny: Rise of Iron – another lease of life for the space shooter, but it falls short of the Bungie’s inspirational best

    September 27, 2016

    Destiny’s previous expansion, The Taken King, was a bit of a relief. It simplified the space odyssey’s more frustrating elements, meaning, for example, that when you finally obtained a much-sought after piece of gear (one that you had killed countless sentient beings for) you could start using it right away, rather than having to collect [...]

  • A Dutch artist is creating tiny worlds suspended inside fragile glass tubes

    September 27, 2016

    Standing at just a few inches tall, these lilliputian constructions from Dutch artist Rosa de Jong are the architectural equivalent of ships in a bottle. The series, entitled Micro Matter, presents miniature vertical townships of alien proportions, each suggesting a wider and more fantastical world beyond. Indeed, de Jong says she had initially intended to [...]

  • The glorious bus stops of the former USSR, as shot by photographer Peter Ortner

    September 26, 2016

    Even in the often stifling artistic conditions that existed in the outer reaches of the Soviet Union, creativity found a way. While Soviet architects experimented with startling modernist buildings in Mother Russia, the outposts largely had to settle for endlessly repeating brutalist tower-blocks, each one as punishingly grey as the last. Municipal buildings – and [...]

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