Russian prisoner freed in swap urges UK not to let hundreds more ‘die off’
Vladimir Kara-Murza, a Russian dissident freed in the biggest prisoner swap since the cold war, has appealed to Keir Starmer during a meeting in Downing
Europe has questions to answer over migrant abuse in Tunisia, say MEPs and activists
The European Commission can no longer ignore mounting evidence of the gross human rights violations against migrants and refugees in Tunisia, say MEPs and activists.
James Cameron taunts critics of his dialogue: ‘Let me see your highest-grossing films’
James Cameron has hit back against reviewers – and filmgoers – who criticise the dialogue in his films. Speaking to Empire for the 40th anniversary
‘The whole human condition is encased in the story’: why Beatles films just keep coming
The Beatles broke up in 1970 but – as far as the film industry is concerned – they are more current than ever, with a
‘My first impression was this person’s a genius’: the life and legacy of producer pioneer Sophie
Next week sees the release of the self-titled final album by the British artist and producer Sophie, who died in 2021, aged 34, after an
Good boy of Steel! Is Krypto the Superdog really coming to Superman: Legacy?
The brand new DC Universe has somehow run out of ideas, even before it has really got going. They’ve scraped the bottom of the barrel,
Joan As Police Woman: Lemons, Limes and Orchids review – stripped back songs of love and loss
It’s been six years since US multi-instrumentalist Joan Wasser released Damned Devotion, her last album of new material. There have been stopgaps along the way
Why reaction to Lionsgate’s AI film deal reminds me of the Campaign for Real Ale | Peter Bradshaw
A shiver of unease, combined with a strangely defeated shrug, is how the news that entertainment behemoth Lionsgate has signed a deal with the artificial
Demi Lovato’s starry documentary Child Star offers hard truths
Child Star, a new documentary directed by Demi Lovato, smartly does not open with the former Disney star, nor any of the former child performers
‘It’s guerrilla warfare’: Brazil fire teams fight Amazon blazes – and the arsonists who start them
The occupants of the vinyl-coated military tents at this remote jungle camp in Brazil’s wild west compare the hellscape surrounding them to catastrophes old and