Returning to the top level of professional tennis after a lengthy injury layoff and trying to rediscover rhythm is a struggle under the best circumstances.
Author: Sarah Mitchell
‘New music and a good night out’: Amy Winehouse film shows vital role of small venues
As critics debate the accuracy of Back to Black, the long-awaited biopic on the short life of Amy Winehouse, there is at least one aspect
Canada spies under pressure over foreign meddling reports
Canada’s spy agency is under pressure after Justin Trudeau and his closest advisers say they were never made aware of a report that Beijing “clandestinely
Challengers review – Zendaya aces uproariously sexy tennis-set love triangle
It’s almost too good to be true. Could cinema be witnessing the birth of a stunning new mixed doubles partnership? Last year, Korean-Canadian film-maker Celine
Argentina court blames Iran for deadly 1994 bombing of Jewish center
A new ruling by Argentina’s highest criminal court has blamed Iran for the fatal 1994 attack against a Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, declaring
‘The new DiCaprio’: how Leo Woodall became one of UK’s hottest exports
You’d probably never heard of him two years ago and now his blue eyes and floppy sandy hair are everywhere – from magazine covers to
Can Joker: Folie à Deux avoid becoming like any other comic book movie?
What a strange beast Todd Phillips’ Joker: Folie à Deux, the debut trailer for which was released this week, looks to be. Here we have
After 101 years – and a $20 find at a yard sale – Clara Bow’s lost film premieres
A century after she first began to turn heads, Clara Bow is “It” once more. The iconic flapper of the silent film era inspired Margot
Nicola Peltz Beckham, a billionaire’s daughter, made a movie about abject poverty. It’s as bad as you think | Kady Ruth Ashcraft
If a nepo baby makes a laughably oblique film portraying what she must imagine to be the strife of the impoverished class, but hardly anyone
‘We searched for ladies over 70’: on the trail of Jordan’s forgotten folk music
In the Jordanian town of Tafilah, a six-year-old boy softly hummed a song. His family were astonished, and his 82-year-old great-grandmother, Jawaher Al Ahmad, overheard