The little events of our lives and what they become when they’ve passed, the technical process of film development, the sensation of jumping and landing, digital culture and its supplanting of the analogue.
The little events of our lives and what they become when they’ve passed, the technical process of film development, the sensation of jumping and landing, digital culture and its supplanting of the analogue.
Initially appearing as an agreeable, if somewhat overplayed piece of World War II era stage comedy; The Darkling Plain quickly reveals itself as a broadly drawn satire on the war on terror and the current American – British relationship.
If you don’t know what a Socratic dialectic is, it’s safe to assume Dizraeli and Baba Brinkman do.
Based on Carl Hiaasen’s best selling novel, Lucky You is ostensibly a comic thriller about the depths of human credulity and greed.
The title Mile End refers to a London Underground station, which in 2002 was the scene of the murder upon which the play is loosely based. The narrative revolves around three interrelated cast members: a troubled but happy couple, a man descending into schizophrenia, and the third, a host of black clad puppeteers, who anonymously [...]
Jo Caulfield, by now a mainstay of British stand-up, returns to Edinburgh with her new show, Jo Caulfield Goes to Hell.
Never afraid of improvisation and audience interaction, Caulfield mixes up good-natured, if merciless, dressings down of hapless audience members with well observed swings at ‘All the things that piss me off. Mostly people’.
In fact she [...]




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(5.00 out of 5)



(5.00 out of 5)



(5.00 out of 5)



(5.00 out of 5)