Reviews of the Scientific Renaissance by Marie Hall

  • Better Telephone call Saul, season 6, review: Breaking Bad's classier cousin says cheerio in style

    Jimmy McGill's transformation into Saul Goodman is most complete, only the final season still has plenty of questions to answer

    Bob Odenkirk as Saul Goodman in season six of Better Call Saul
  • Life After Life, review: a Groundhog Day period drama that makes you care near its characters

    Kate Atkinson's 2013 bestseller has been gorgeously adapted for Goggle box with about everything intact

  • The Secrets of Dumbledore'due south box office hasn't killed Fantastic Beasts – yet

    Despite the travails of Johnny Depp and JK Rowling, the third Harry Potter spin-off isn't quite the bomb we were expecting

  • Anish Kapoor leaves art rivals seeing cherry over 'earth's blackest blackness'

    Turner Prize winner unveils first artworks made with new light-absorbing cloth, but his monopoly on its apply has stoked controversy

  • Sonia Boyce, British Pavilion, Venice, review: lacks the X-factor of genuine imaginative strangeness

    The British artist'south Venice bear witness Feeling Her Way is gentle and tasteful, with an underlying current of social critique, just information technology doesn't soar

Comment and analysis

  • The fantasy-free Platinum Jubilee reading list is pure literary snobbery

    With glaring snubs for Rowling, Tolkien and Pratchett, the 'reader-driven' Large Jubilee Read listing bears no relation to reality

    The late fantasy author Terry Pratchett, in 2010
  • Nosotros listing historic buildings – why don't we do the same for endangered British films?

    Gems of British movie theatre are going to be lost unless we get organised, preserve and restore them. Here's where conservators should start...

    Soldiering on: Anton Walbrook and Deborah Kerr in Powell and Pressburger's 1943 The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, which was painstakingly restored in 2012, paid for by Martin Scorsese
  • The David Lynch rumours are growing past the day

    The lack of a Cannes proclamation hasn't stopped the whisper railroad train – is the master of arthouse bizarrerie returning after 16 years?

    Is a new film from director David Lynch on the cards?
  • Jez Butterworth's bold, bright Jerusalem wouldn't be written today

    The 2009 play, which is existence revived in the West Finish, feels at odds with theatre'south current demand to make us feel shame most nationhood

    An unlikely hero: Mark Rylance in Jerusalem

Reviews

  • Sonia Boyce, British Pavilion, Venice, review: lacks the Ten-factor of genuine imaginative strangeness

    The British artist'southward Venice evidence Feeling Her Fashion is gentle and tasteful, with an underlying electric current of social critique, but it doesn't soar

    Room 3 in Sonia Boyce's 2022 British Pavilion featuring performers Jacqui Dankworth and Sofia Jernberg
  • Anish Kapoor's Venice sculptures are gimmicky but crackle with blackness magic

    The highlights of the artist's powerful new exhibition are some strange black sculptures made with his ain licensed pigment

    'Kapoor black': the artist's mesmerising new sculptures contain a pigment that absorbs 99 per cent of light
  • Technical brilliance and beguiling artistry from Yuja Wang at Aix, plus the best of Apr's classical concerts

    France'south reply to the Salzburg Festival delivered another terrific evening, thank you to the superstar Chinese-American pianist

    Yuja Wang
  • Practice polygraph tests actually work?

    Amit Katwala's Tremors in the Claret charts the history of lie detectors with a series of gripping true-law-breaking stories

    Ice-cold: Sharon Stone as Catherine Tramell in the 1992 neo-noir film Basic Instinct
  • If only this exhibition about the Duke of Wellington and his lady friends wasn't and so po-faced

    Wellington, Women & Friendship at London'southward Apsley Firm sidesteps the starting time Duke's philandering - which is a shame

    Marianne Patterson painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence in 1818; a portrait that was commissioned by the Duke of Wellington 
  • A Tidy Ending by Joanna Cannon review: a serial killer thriller that's too neat for its own adept

    The author of The Trouble with Goats and Sheep returns with a novel that sacrifices human complexity for cheap twists

    Book review A Tidy Ending by Joanna Cannon, fiction, novel, The Trouble with Goats and Sheep

Behind the music

Rock's untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all fourth dimension

Tonight's Television set

  • What's on TV tonight: Life Subsequently Life, Better Call Saul, The Lost Leonardo and more

    Your complete guide to the week'southward boob tube, films and sport, across terrestrial and digital platforms

Screen Secrets

A regular series telling the stories backside film and TV'southward greatest hits – and nigh fascinating flops

  • Rotter or rapist? Beefcake of a Scandal'due south moral dilemma treads murky waters

    Netflix's adaption of the political thriller, starring Sienna Miller, nigh Britain's privileged elite is a cautionary tale for our times

    anatomy of a scandal review netflix sienna miller political thriller
  • Do polygraph tests actually piece of work?

    Amit Katwala's Tremors in the Blood charts the history of prevarication detectors with a series of gripping truthful-crime stories

    Ice-cold: Sharon Stone as Catherine Tramell in the 1992 neo-noir film Basic Instinct
  • The fantasy-complimentary Platinum Jubilee reading list is pure literary snobbery

    With glaring snubs for Rowling, Tolkien and Pratchett, the 'reader-driven' Big Jubilee Read listing bears no relation to reality

    The late fantasy author Terry Pratchett, in 2010
  • A Tidy Catastrophe by Joanna Cannon review: a serial killer thriller that's too smashing for its own practiced

    The author of The Trouble with Goats and Sheep returns with a novel that sacrifices human complexity for cheap twists

    Book review A Tidy Ending by Joanna Cannon, fiction, novel, The Trouble with Goats and Sheep
  • Sonia Boyce, British Pavilion, Venice, review: lacks the X-factor of genuine imaginative strangeness

    The British artist's Venice show Feeling Her Way is gentle and tasteful, with an underlying current of social critique, but it doesn't soar

    Room 3 in Sonia Boyce's 2022 British Pavilion featuring performers Jacqui Dankworth and Sofia Jernberg
  • Anish Kapoor'southward Venice sculptures are contemporary simply crackle with black magic

    The highlights of the artist'southward powerful new exhibition are some foreign blackness sculptures fabricated with his ain licensed pigment

    'Kapoor black': the artist's mesmerising new sculptures contain a pigment that absorbs 99 per cent of light
  • 'The truth has been compromised': Saudi cash, woodworm and The Lost Leonardo

    The manager of a new documentary about Salvator Mundi explains how he lifted the lid on a world of lies, dark deals and odd characters

    Salvator Mundi is now the property of Saudi Arabia – but as a new documentary shows, the story is far from over
  • All spin? The 2019 General Ballot reimagined as, er... a giant mobile

    The sculpture, by the election'south official artist, Nicky Hirst, will hang in Portcullis Business firm, where more than 200 MPs have their offices

    New sculpture There Was A Time in Portcullis House

In depth

More than stories

  • Sonia Boyce, British Pavilion, Venice, review: lacks the 10-factor of 18-carat imaginative strangeness

    The British artist's Venice show Feeling Her Style is gentle and tasteful, with an underlying electric current of social critique, simply it doesn't soar

    Room 3 in Sonia Boyce's 2022 British Pavilion featuring performers Jacqui Dankworth and Sofia Jernberg
  • Life After Life, review: a Groundhog Day period drama that makes y'all care about its characters

    Kate Atkinson's 2013 bestseller has been gorgeously adapted for Tv set with almost everything intact

    Eliza Riley as a young Ursula in episode one of Life After Life
  • Anish Kapoor leaves art rivals seeing crimson over 'world's blackest blackness'

    Turner Prize winner unveils first artworks made with new low-cal-absorbing material, merely his monopoly on its use has stoked controversy

    Anish Kapoor's work titled Descent into Limbo
  • The Secrets of Dumbledore's box office hasn't killed Fantastic Beasts – yet

    Despite the travails of Johnny Depp and JK Rowling, the tertiary Harry Potter spin-off isn't quite the flop we were expecting

    Jessica Williams and Callum Turner in Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore
  • Anish Kapoor'south Venice sculptures are gimmicky simply crackle with blackness magic

    The highlights of the artist'south powerful new exhibition are some strange black sculptures made with his own licensed pigment

    'Kapoor black': the artist's mesmerising new sculptures contain a pigment that absorbs 99 per cent of light
  • Technical brilliance and fallacious artistry from Yuja Wang at Aix, plus the best of Apr's classical concerts

    France'south reply to the Salzburg Festival delivered another terrific evening, cheers to the superstar Chinese-American pianist

    Yuja Wang
  • Rotter or rapist? Anatomy of a Scandal'south moral dilemma treads murky waters

    Netflix's adaption of the political thriller, starring Sienna Miller, about Great britain's privileged elite is a cautionary tale for our times

    anatomy of a scandal review netflix sienna miller political thriller
  • 'The truth has been compromised': Saudi cash, woodworm and The Lost Leonardo

    The manager of a new documentary about Salvator Mundi explains how he lifted the lid on a world of lies, dark deals and odd characters

    Salvator Mundi is now the property of Saudi Arabia – but as a new documentary shows, the story is far from over

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Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/

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