Giovanni Battista Moroni, Royal Academy

GIOVANNI BATTISTA MORONI, ROYAL ACADEMY Renaissance Italy's forgotten master of the fleeting moment

Renaissance Italy's forgotten master of the fleeting moment

Written in the 16th century, Giorgio Vasari’s Lives of the Artists continues to underpin our understanding of the Renaissance, and its author is blamed, often with some justification, for a multitude of art historical anomalies. But there can be little doubt that Vasari’s omission of Giovanni Battista Moroni, a fine painter of portraits and religious subjects, has been instrumental in the disappearance of this artist from the Renaissance halls of fame.

DVD: In the Name of

Gay themes tackled impressively in Polish Catholic context

Gay cinema in Poland is emerging slowly, for understandable reasons, which makes Malgoska Szumowska’s accomplished, if somewhat traditional drama In the Name of something of a ground-breaker. Not least because its story is centred around the country’s most established institution, the Catholic church, putting the subject of homosexuality squarely into the national debate. Interestingly, and encouragingly, the film topped local box office results for its opening weekend last autumn.

Tommy Tiernan, Soho Theatre

TOMMY TIERNAN, SOHO THEATRE Riveting state-of-the-nation address about Ireland

Riveting show that's a sort of state-of-the-nation address about Ireland

In Irish mythology, a stray sod is an enchanted piece of grass that, if stepped on, leaves a person feeling disorientated and lost, even in familiar surroundings. Although there's no reference to this in Tommy Tiernan's new show, Stray Sod, there's plenty of self-knowing stage Irishness – even, briefly, Oirishness – as he delivers a riveting 80 minutes of comedy that's a sort of state-of-the-nation address about his home country.

Paradise: Faith

Chastity gone mad, in the second in an impressive Austrian trilogy

What goes on in some homes would scare the sturdiest horse. Take Anna (Maria Hofstatter), whose daily routine might strike some serial killers as pathological. Semi-naked self-flagellation and circuiting the house on bleeding knees is the least of it. “Sexual wildness destroys”, a kitchen homily reminds a woman whose desires are buried in punishing Catholicism. But when paraplegic Muslim husband Nabil (Nabil Saleh, pictured below with Hofstatter) reappears demanding his conjugal rights, anyone’s faith would shake.

Dangerous Edge: A Life of Graham Greene, Sky Arts 1

DANGEROUS EDGE: A LIFE OF GRAHAM GREENE, SKY ARTS 1 Psychological focus on the writer, strongest on Greene as traveller and film enthusiast

Psychological focus on the writer, strongest on Greene as traveller and film enthusiast

Early on in Dangerous Edge: A Life of Graham Greene, John le Carré remembers Greene telling him that childhood provides “the bank balance of the writer”. Greene remained in credit on that inspiration front throughout his life, even while he struggled financially in his early writing days with a young family; later in life, too, he lost everything to a swindling financial adviser – the move to France was to avoid the Revenue.

Are You Having a Laugh?, BBC One

ARE YOU HAVING A LAUGH?, BBC ONE Former MP questions whether comics have it in for Christianity

Former MP questions whether comics have it in for Christianity

How do we know Jesus Christ was a Jew? He was still living with his mum at 33 and she thought he was God Almighty. Are you offended? I sincerely hope not and profuse apologies if you are, but that was the first religious joke I remember from my Catholic childhood, and which managed to take a swipe at two religions for the price of one.

Damned by Despair, National Theatre

DAMNED BY DESPAIR, NATIONAL THEATRE Spain's theatrical Golden Age is tarnished in National misfire

Spain's theatrical Golden Age is tarnished in National misfire

Spain's Golden Age turns unaccountably to dross in Damned by Despair, the Tirso de Molina play that is a good half-hour shorter than the running time given in the programme but won't (in this production, anyway) ever be brief enough for some.

DVD: Corpo Celeste

Sensitive, low-key coming-of-age drama set in Italy

The onset of puberty is difficult, and especially so for girls in art house films. Marta is 12 and has been away from Italy for 10 years. In the days after returning with her mother and sister, she contends with being prepared for her first communion and her changing body. Quietly, as if not there, Marta observes the hypocrisy of adults. Dog-tired from working in a bakery, her mother is forced into the background.

Corpo Celeste

A quirky and original tale of sexual and spiritual awakening in Southern Italy

Now here is something genuinely original and genuinely innovative coming out of Italian cinema, a very welcome surprise. Alice Rohrwacher’s debut feature film has a freshness of outlook and a sharpness of overview that could put many of her more venerable rivals in Italy to shame.