Women Make Film: Part One review - a mesmerising journey of neglected film

WOMEN MAKE FILM: PART ONE Cousins' latest opus seeks to give a voice to the women cinema neglected

Cousins' latest opus seeks to give a voice to the women cinema neglected

Equally ambitious in scope as his 900min ode to cinema The Story of Film: An Odyssey, Mark Cousins’ latest work, Women Make Film, is a fourteen-hour exploration of the work of female film directors down the decades.

New Music Lockdown 5: Foals, Claptone, Luke La Volpe, Minecraft's music festival and more

NEW MUSIC LOCKDOWN 5 Foals, Claptone, Luke La Volpe, Minecraft's music festival and more

Five spanking new stay-at-home music recommendations for this week

Way into lockdown now and, as the music world adjusts, so what artists are attempting becomes, in some cases, more sophisticated. In others, many impressively make the most of whatever tech they have to hand. Either way it’s always fascinating to check in on the best that’s out there. Below is this week’s pick. Dive in!

Foals’ FBC Transmissions

Aditi Mittal, Soho Theatre On Demand review - cows, mothers and fempowerment

★★★ ADITI MITTAL, SOHO THEATRE Cows, mothers and fempowerment

Indian comic on how she discovered feminism

“There are places in India where it's safer to be a cow than a woman” is a seemingly innocuous statement, but for Indian comic Aditi Mittal it was a dangerous one to make in a comedy show. It led to her arrest after a man complained that it was offensive to Hindus (and possibly cows, who knows).

Helen McCarthy: Double Lives - A History of Working Motherhood review – doing it for themselves

★★★★ HELEN MCCARTHY - DOUBLE LIVES A History of Working Motherhood

Masterful chronicle of the sleights of hand that got mothers into the workplace

Want to enact mass social change? Make it about children. About their health, their prosperity, their future. Make it about men; their security, their wellbeing. Make it about society. What benefits are there for the economy, the home? Just for God’s sake, remember… it doesn’t work to fight for women alone.

Jane Eyre, National Theatre at Home review - a fiery feminist adaptation

★★★★ JANE EYRE, NATIONAL THEATRE A fiery feminist adaptation

Sally Cookson's take on Brontë is innately theatrical and ferociously resonant

The National Theatre’s online broadcasts got off to a storming start with One Man, Two Guvnors – watched by over 2.5 million people, either on the night or in the week since its live streaming, and raising around £66,000 in donations.

The Perfect Candidate review - seeking status for women in Saudi

★★★ THE PERFECT CANDIDATE Haifaa Al Mansoor seeks status for women in Saudi

Haifaa Al Mansour follows 'Wadjda' with a new tale of female independence in Saudi Arabia

Saudi director Haifaa Al Mansour is back on home territory with her new film, and you’ll recognise much here from her characterful 2012 debut Wadjda, itself the first-ever feature to emerge from her home country.

Director Marjane Satrapi: ‘The real question is do you like everyone? No? So, why should everyone like you?’

FILMMAKER MARJANE SATRAPI ‘The real question is do you like everyone? No? So, why should everyone like you?’

The forthright 'Radioactive' filmmaker on intelligence, ignorance and Marie Curie

Marjane Satrapi, the Iranian-born French filmmaker, has a reputation that precedes her. Her upbringing was the subject of the acclaimed films Persepolis (2007) and Chicken With Plums (2011). Persepolis won the Cannes Jury Prize, two César awards and was nominated for an Oscar. Satrapi adapted and co-directed both films. She also wrote and illustrated the comic books on which they were based.

Mieko Kawakami: Breasts and Eggs review - a book of two halves

Claustrophobia, queasiness, and self-discovery in the female body

Mieko Kawakami’s Breasts and Eggs is a true novel of two halves and is (excuse the pun) a bit of a curate’s egg. Kawakami’s bio at the beginning of the text explains that the novel was expanded from an earlier novella, made clear by a separation into books one and two. The first book centres on the visit of the narrator’s sister and niece to her house in Tokyo, and the second brings the narrator, Natsume, into the centre of a story about her desire to conceive a child at forty.