‘In folk horror, the soil beneath our feet is seismically unstable’, writes Hollie Starling in her introduction to Bog People ...
Dancing at Lughnasa, Brian Friel’s poignant play inspired by his own family’s roots in Donegal, is no exception. The best ...
I have always wanted to visit The Modernist. Along the row of stylish windows lining Manchester’s Porter Street, its ...
The first rule about being British is, you don’t talk about it. Like Fight Club. It’s our main characteristic. This is one of ...
Over recent years there have been rumblings of an Ideal revival, possible as a feature film, but for its anniversary it’s ...
Russell T Davies, it’s fair to say, has the gift of the gab. A master of the press release soundbite and its carnivalesque come-hither call, more importantly he’s an eloquent and impassioned disputant ...
Unlike some of their more feted peers, The Wedding Present never quite infiltrated the mass consciousness, neither by wearing holes in the comfort blanket conviviality of Wogan on early evening ...