overnight reviews

Salem’s Lot review - listless King remake

★★ SALEM'S LOT King's small-town vampires suffer vicious edits amidst tantalising folk magic

King's small-town vampires suffer vicious edits amidst tantalising folk magic

A boy’s dead friend scratching at his first-floor window, Nosferatu-like vampire Barlow rearing up with heart attack shock…The Texas Chain Saw Massacre director Tobe Hooper’s 1979 TV take on Stephen King’s Salem’s Lot scared a teen generation out of their skins.

This new film exists first as a failed franchise equation, adding Conjuring Universe producer James Wan to IT screenwriter Gary Dauberman as writer-director (he also wrote The Conjuring’s Annabelle series), but suffering heavy cuts prior to this much delayed release.

Music Reissues Weekly: Arvo Pärt - Tabula Rasa

ARVO PÄRT - TABULA RASA A foundational album returns

A foundational album returns

In 2022, Spritualized’s Jason Pierce described his musical goal as "trying to find somewhere between Arvo Pärt and The Stooges.” Amongst the most arresting and explicitly Pärt-styled results of this quest to link the minimalist composer with Iggy Pop‘s pre-punk confrontationists was the affecting "Broken Heart," from his band’s 1997 third album Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space.

The Turn of the Screw, English National Opera review - Jamesian ambiguities chillingly preserved

★★★★★ THE TURN OF THE SCREW, ENO Jamesian ambiguities chillingly preserved

Pity and terror in Ailish Tynan’s anguished Governess and Isabella Bywater’s production

At first, you wonder if the peculiar voice of Henry James’s maybe unreliable narrator can be preserved in this production. Surely the outcome is known if we first meet the Governess in an insane asylum bed? Yet whether she was mad or maddened during the course of terrifying events 30 years earlier remains crucially unclear. Between them director/designer Isabella Bywater, soprano Ailish Tynan and conductor Duncan Ward deliver all the frissons in Britten’s concentrated masterpiece.

London Film Festival 2024 - the Vatican, the Blitz, a trip to Poland and a surfin' nightmare

LONDON FILM FESTIVAL 2024 the Vatican, the Blitz, a trip to Poland and a surfin' nightmare

Another cinematic feast as LFF '24 gets underway

Conclave

Director Edward Berger won an Oscar for his last feature, All Quiet on the Western Front (2022), but here he concerns himself with the more intimate and claustrophobic battlefield of the Vatican. The Pope (Bruno Novelli) has died, and under the watchful eye of the Dean, Cardinal Lawrence (Ralph Fiennes), the cardinals gather to appoint his successor. No-one said it would be easy.

The Last of the Sea Women review - a moving tale of feisty traditional divers

★ THE LAST OF THE SEA WOMEN A moving tale of feisty traditional divers

Eye-opening Korean doc about intrepid harvesters of the deep

“The ocean is our home… Even in my next life I will dive again,” says Geum Ok, one of a band of female divers from Jeju, a volcanic island 60 miles south of the Korean peninsular.

Trouble in Tahiti/A Quiet Place, Linbury Theatre review - top cast plays unhappy families

★★★★ TROUBLE IN TAHITI/A QUIET PLACE, ROYAL OPERA Top cast plays unhappy families

Mini-masterpiece and splashy sequel carried off with as much conviction as they can take

Most of us have been there: an impasse in a marriage, a bereavement in a dysfunctional family. Leonard Bernstein certainly had when he composed Trouble in Tahiti in 1952, basing the unhappy couple on his own parents and even the incipient problems in his own relationship with Felicia Montealegre (see the superb film Maestro), and 30 years later the sequel, A Quiet Place, when Felicia’s early death from cancer had left him unhappy and guilty.

Kanga, Manchester Collective, Singh, RNCM Manchester review - string ensemble playing at its most rewarding

★ KANGA, MANCHESTER COLLECTIVE, SINGH String ensemble at its most rewarding

New classics introduced and a world premiere with a dark story

Of all the inventive and enterprising things Manchester Collective do, it’s most often been the playing of a string ensemble led from first desk by Rakhi Singh that’s been the most fundamentally rewarding.

The Lehman Trilogy, Gillian Lynne Theatre review - three brothers, two crashes, one American Dream

 THE LEHMAN TRILOGY, GILLIAN LYNNE THEATRE Sensational stagecraft elevates familiar tale of immigrant success in the USA

Sensational stagecraft elevates familiar tale of immigrant success in the USA

Merchant bankers then eh? It’s not a slang term of abuse for nothing, as the middlemen collecting the crumbs off the cake (in Sherman McCoy’’s analogy from The Bonfire of the Vanities) have a reputation for living high on the hog off the ideas and industry of others. They’re the typess who might work as a subject for a cynical musical, but in a straight drama?

Filumena, Theatre Royal Windsor review - Mozartian marriage comedy with pasta sauce

★★★★ FILUMENA, THEATRE ROYAL WINDSOR Dazzling Felicity Kendal conquers time in a tour de force of comedic playing

Dazzling Felicity Kendal conquers time in a tour de force of comedic playing

Of all the ingenues in all the world of golden TV sitcom, Felicity Kendal was the most innocent, the most wicked, the most deceptive, with an amaretto voice that wheedled like a child and seduced like a witch. Half a century on, there must be a heck of a portrait in her attic because at 78 Kendal displays intact all her qualities – including that elfin prettiness – in a glorious star performance as Filumena, the mother-of-three in want of a husband in Eduardo di Filippo's classic comedy.