Shifty to 28 Years Later: the week in rave reviews

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"Review Roundup: New Documentaries and Series Explore Mental Health, Societal Issues, and Friendship"

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This week, several new series and films have garnered attention for their unique storytelling and emotional depth. Adam Curtis's latest documentary on BBC iPlayer presents a kaleidoscopic view of Britain over the past four decades, examining how the nation has reached a precarious state of collapse. The review highlights Curtis's ability to articulate complex ideas in an engaging and stylish manner, making the difficult themes of societal decline feel more bearable. Lucy Mangan's review praises the documentary for its intellectual rigor, suggesting that it represents a rare opportunity to engage with a thoroughly developed thesis presented with flair. In contrast, Heston Blumenthal's candid exploration of his mental health journey on ITV1 reveals the chef's vulnerability after being sectioned by his wife. The emotional conversations captured in the series, particularly with his son Jack, resonate deeply, showcasing the raw honesty that characterizes modern discussions around mental health. Mangan describes the exchange as one of the most painful yet honest depictions of familial struggle on television in years, emphasizing the need for such conversations in the public sphere.

In the realm of film, a powerful documentary is currently in cinemas, following six former inmates as they revisit their old cells in a former women's prison. This film not only reflects on childhood trauma and domestic abuse but also emphasizes the collaborative process behind its creation, which involved the women in the editing and therapeutic aspects of the production. The review stresses the importance of this documentary for policymakers, highlighting its potential to inform and inspire change. Meanwhile, Danny Boyle's horror sequel brings back the adrenaline-fueled sprinting zombies, offering a mix of satire and folk horror, while Pixar's latest film presents a charming story about friendship in space. Other notable mentions include Michael Haneke's re-released stalker drama, which delves into themes of denial and guilt, and a bleak documentary on the Grenfell disaster that critiques systemic failures. Each of these works contributes to a rich tapestry of contemporary storytelling, reflecting the complexities of human experience and societal issues.

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BBC iPlayer; full series available now

Summed up in a sentenceIn his signature kaleidoscopic style, celebrated documentarian Adam Curtis looks back at Britain over the past 40 years … and how it has come to the brink of collapse.

What our reviewer said“It is an increasing rarity to stand in the presence of anyone with an idea, a thesis, that they have thoroughly worked out to their own satisfaction and then present stylishly, exuberantly and still intelligently. The hell and the handcart feel that bit more bearable now.”Lucy Mangan

Read the full review

Further readingThatcher, Farage and toe-sucking: Adam Curtis on how Britain came to the brink of civil war

BBC Two/iPlayer; available now

Summed up in a sentenceThe celebrated chef opens up with searing honesty about being sectioned by his wife 18 months ago.

What our reviewer said“A conversation with his son Jack, also a chef, is one of the most dreadfully honest and painful things I have seen on television in years. Pent-up emotions pour forth from Jack as he remembers “just wanting relaxing conversation with our dad and not being allowed to have one … You didn’t want to know anyone’s thoughts. I just didn’t think you gave a shit.”Lucy Mangan

Read the full review

Further reading‘It’s part of who I am’: Heston Blumenthal on the bipolar diagnosis that saved his life

ITV1/ITVX; full series available now

Summed up in a sentenceThe veteran presenter returns to show us his woo woo life in New Zealand in a show that is surely destined to be a cult classic.

What our reviewer said“‘All we are is body energy systems,’ he … is ‘explains’ the word? ‘They touch everything around us. Which is how you move into the bigger matrix, the universal energy system.’ You know what? I loved Noel’s House Party. And nothing has ever made me cry happier tears than Noel’s Christmas Presents. He’s earned this.”Lucy Mangan

Read the full review

Further reading‘I am Jesus!’: the TV brilliance of Noel Edmonds

BBC iPlayer; all series available now

Summed up in a sentenceThe worstMotherlandmother gets her own spin-off – and the gag rate is so high it fizzes with the energy of perimenopause.

What our reviewer said“The gags – about Gloria Hunniford, the Just Seventeen problem page and Sinn Féin – are very British and aimed at a very particular audience, namely strung out middle-aged mums longing to laugh until they wee a bit at jokes about wellness supplements. Too rarely do we get the chance.”Chitra Ramaswamy

Read the full review

In cinemas now

Summed up in a sentencePowerful documentary following six former inmates revisiting their old cells in the former women’s prison to reflect on childhood trauma and domestic abuse.

What our reviewer said“The film producers explain at length in notes provided that their process involved working with the six women, who had a say in the final edit and were given access throughout to a psychotherapist. Their collaborative documentary feels like essential viewing for policymakers.”Cath Clarke

Read the full review

Further reading‘Prison was the first place we felt sisterhood’: six women return to the ruins of Holloway

In cinemas now

Summed up in a sentenceDanny Boyle’s horror threequel brings back the sprinting zombies as an island lad seeks help for his sick mum on the undead-infested mainland.

What our reviewer said“The film takes a generational, even evolutionary leap into the future from the initial catastrophe, creating something that mixes folk horror, little-England satire and even a grieving process for all that has happened.”Peter Bradshaw

Read the full review

Further reading‘You’d never make Slumdog today’: Danny Boyle on risks, regrets and returning to the undead

In cinemas now

Summed up in a sentencePixar’s latest offers Spielbergian twists and an aggressive, deal-oriented alien in a story about a lonely boy who finds friendship in space.

What our reviewer said“Elio may well indeed do the business. It has charm, likability and that potent ingredient: childhood loneliness and vulnerability.”Peter Bradshaw

Read the full review

Further readingRaspberry scented weirdness: will Elio be Pixar’s wildest ride to date?

In cinemas now

Summed up in a sentenceMichael Haneke’s stalker drama, rereleased as part of a retrospective season, Complicit, is a compelling tale about the denial and guilt mixed into the foundations of western prosperity.

What our reviewer said“There is no dramatic musical score, none of the traditional shocks or excitements, just an IV-drip-drip-drip of disquiet leading finally to a convulsion of horror.”Peter Bradshaw

Read the full review

Further readingMichael Haneke films – ranked!

Netflix; out now

Summed up in a sentenceBleak, enraging documentary combining first-hand accounts of the disaster with an appalling record of official negligence.What our reviewer said“With the very considerable help of the housing-issues journalist Peter Apps, the film shows how the horror was created by a perfect storm of incompetence, mendacity, greed, and (that heartsinking phrase) systemic failure.”Peter Bradshaw

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Further reading‘Grenfell should make us all uncomfortable’: Olaide Sadiq on making Grenfell: Uncovered

Reviewed by Kathryn Hughes

Summed up in a sentenceAn ambitious meditation on the power of stories in an age of migration.

What our reviewer said“Over the past 50 years of her distinguished career as a cultural historian, Warner has immersed herself in fairytales, playground chants, lullabies and fables. Now she suggests using these folk forms to forge connections between arrivants (a term she prefers to ‘migrants’) and their often hostile hosts.”Read the full review

Reviewed by Amy-Jane Beer

Summed up in a sentenceFrom buzzards in Oxfordshire to cranes in Kent – how once common birds left their mark in British placenames.

What our reviewer said“Warren’s wordcraft is sublime … his style textured and generous, weaving fascination, family life, and lightly carried expertise.”

Read the full review

Reviewed by Fiona Sturges

Summed up in a sentenceThe daughter of the Fear of Flying author on being neglected as a child – and dealing with her mother’s dementia.

What our reviewer said“The writing veers between punchy and meandering, with moments of deep sadness leavened by a sardonic humour.”

Read the full review

Further readingMy mother was a famous feminist writer known for her candour and wit. But she was also a fantasist who couldn’t be bothered to spend time raising me

Reviewed by Sam Byers

Summed up in a sentenceA polyphonic portrait of contemporary Belfast digs into the faultlines of class and money.

What our reviewer said“In her first novel, this acclaimed short-story writer revels in the possibilities of an expanded cast, yet controls the pace and framing with all the precision of a miniaturist.”

Read the full review

Reviewed by Toby Litt

Summed up in a sentenceA standup takes revenge after a hatchet-job review.

What our reviewer said“Is giving an artist a one-star review an act of abuse? That’s the starting point of this entertaining and very timely debut novel.”

Read the full review

Reviewed by Joe Moran

Summed up in a sentenceA brilliant history of a weaponised mantra.

What our reviewer said“He wants us to think of free speech as being not just about the content of words but about which voices are heard most loudly and which are marginalised.”

Read the full review

Further readingThe big idea: what do we really mean by free speech?

Out now

Summed up in a sentenceFamily, fatherhood and friendship fill the British rapper’s fourth album – along with, for the first time, his singing voice.

What our reviewer said“Whenever Carner slips into his low-pitched, totally unaffected croon, it cuts through any over-sweetness like a squeeze of lemon.”Rachel Aroesti

Read the full review

Out now

Summed up in a sentenceThese New Yorkers made one of our favourite rock albums of recent times with 2023’s Cartwheel. This follow-up broadens out their sound.

What our reviewer said“The way bandleader Will Anderson weaves acoustic and distorted guitars and blasts of needling feedback into something as beguiling as Julia’s War is evidence of a unique talent operating in a crowded field.”Stevie Chick

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Further readingThe bands saving shoegaze, from Deafheaven to Feeble Little Horse

Out now

Summed up in a sentenceThis Estonian duo utiliserunosong, a form of oral poetry specific to the Baltic Finnic languages, and play thekannel(an Estonian zither).

What our reviewer said“These songs are rhythmically complex and have solid, ancient roots, but fans of ambient, Balearic dreaminess and the softer sides of indie pop and psych-folk will find woozy comforts here.”Jude Rogers

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Out now

Summed up in a sentenceConductor Klaus Mäkelä leads the Orchestre de Paris, performing Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique and Ravel’s La Valse, having blown minds with their rendition of the former at last year’s Proms.

What our reviewer said“It’s all played with consummate skill by an orchestra who are clearly responsive to their conductor’s every move.”Erica Jeal

Read the full review

Further readingProm 58: Orchestre de Paris/Mäkelä review – electrifying music-making from an elite team

Out now

Summed up in a sentenceCurrently on tour across the UK, this Chicago indie trio channel the Raincoats, the Feelies and the Velvet Underground on their second album.

What our reviewer said“The album feels almost clockwork: every element machine-tooled, a place for everything, and everything in its place. But there’s no coldness here, the poignancy only accentuated by the poise with which these songs are delivered.”Stevie Chick

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Source: The Guardian