I can still remember sitting down to Theo Angelopoulos’s legendary epic film The Travelling Players and noting that it was 222 minutes long and thinking
Author: Sarah Mitchell
Burkina Faso bans more media over coverage of alleged massacre
Authorities in Burkina Faso have suspended further foreign media over their reporting of an alleged massacre of hundreds of civilians by the Burkinabe army. The
Liverpool have run out of steam. But Klopp’s legacy is already cemented | Jonathan Wilson
And so there will be no glorious farewell for Jürgen Klopp. Saturday’s 2-2 draw with West Ham, coupled with victories for Manchester City and Arsenal,
Turtles All the Way Down review – Isabela Merced leads winning yet uneven YA film
For better and for worse, John Green’s young adult worlds tend toward the dramatic and expansive – big swings, big emotions, big mysteries and dreams.
Dozens dead after dam bursts amid torrential rain in Kenya
At least 45 people died when a makeshift dam burst its banks near a southern town in Kenya’s Rift valley in the early hours of
Cold review – theatrically evocative folk-tale treatment of the pain of miscarriage
Film-makers Claire Coache and Lisle Turner are a couple who survived the horrific experience of losing two babies during pregnancy: one to a medical termination
‘Maybe I’m not ready to be a mum yet’: Ons Jabeur on her grand slam dream
As the best tennis players in the world converged on the lawns of Wimbledon last summer, it soon became clear that Ons Jabeur was soaring.
Everyone Knows That: internet music mystery solved via 1986 adult movie
It’s a musical mystery that has been confounding the internet for years. But an ultra-catchy 80s-sounding song that seemingly no one could identify has finally
Riddle of Fire review – quest for a blueberry pie aims to be ye olde work of whimsy
If you’ve ever tried to make a home movie with young children, you quickly come to appreciate how hard it is to get the little
‘Scalding emotional intensity’: Geoff Dyer on the spiritual power of saxophonist Zoh Amba
Interviewed many years after the experience, Don Cherry said he would “never forget” the first time he heard the tenor saxophonist Albert Ayler. That was