OLLIE KENDRICKÂ compares the motivation of the Right in the UK and Colombia in their recent referendums. The final resting place of Pablo Escobar is nestled..
CALVIN LAW discusses how the 1967 film In The Heat of the Night confronts racial prejudice in a subtle yet impactful manner. The ethnic diversity of Hollywood..
Introducing debut tracks and upcoming shows from CHEMSEX. Chemsex, newly fronted by Maya Harrison, announce their turbulent style of noise rock with the release of ‘For..
IFE NWIBE looks back at the outstanding legacy of Senegalese filmmaker Ousmane Sembène and the cultural relevance of his work that has persisted over time. The recent..
HARRY WISE examines ‘Anthropoid’, a Sean Ellis film adaptation of the Czechoslovak resistance operation during World War Two. Philippa Foot developed a great moral dilemma:..
BEA BOWLES-BRAY reviews August at the Milton Court Theatre. The poet Yvan Goll wrote that ‘decline is also a form of voluptuousness’; that there is..
NIALL ADAMS considers questions of creative ownership prompted by the release of ‘Harry Potter and the Cursed Child’. The launch of the newest work in..
SAM SUMMERS reviews ‘An Insignificant Man’, a documentary that uses the politics of India to reflect on the wider politics of an interconnected, disenfranchised world. ..
CALVIN LAW reviews the varied works of director Tim Burton. Tim Burton is one of the most enigmatic yet divisive directors working today, largely due to..
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