Philip Guston, Timothy Taylor Gallery

PHILIP GUSTON, TIMOTHY TAYLOR GALLERY Small but powerful survey of the American artist's late figurative paintings

Small but powerful survey of the American artist's late figurative paintings

Light. Light banishes the shadows where monsters lurk and where ghosts rattle their chains. “Give me some light, away!” cries the usurping king in Hamlet as his murderous deed is exposed by the trickery of art. What guilt plagues and seizes his conscience, and yet Claudius, conflicted, cannot pray. He must, therefore, remain a captive among the ghosts and the monsters where no light may fall.

One Flute Note/Body Not Fit for Purpose, Lilian Baylis Studio, Sadler's Wells

ONE FLUTE NOTE/BODY NOT FIT FOR PURPOSE, LILIAN BAYLIS STUDIO, SADLER'S WELLS Another clever, comic double bill from Jonathan Burrows and Matteo Fargion

Another clever, comic double bill from Jonathan Burrows and Matteo Fargion

One of the dance world's better-kept secrets is the existence of a brilliantly inventive comic double-act consisting of two paunchy, balding 50-something men. Neither humour nor the over-50s are seen all that often in dance, but it isn't tokenism which makes dance insiders turn out in delighted force for choreographer Jonathan Burrows and composer Matteo Fargion: it's the knowledge that Burrows and Fargion's shows are one of the surest bets in dance for an evening that will be original, funny and clever in equal measure.

DVD: His Girl Friday

Screwball comedy with an intelligent slant remains daisy-fresh

His Girl Friday is funny. Very, very funny. It is also crammed with cutting verbiage as sharply delivered as the moves of a complex pas de deux. Yet another no-frills appearance of the 1940 film on home video is not a surprise as – despite being a Hollywood product – it fell out of copyright and has been just-about endlessly reissued. Nonetheless, anyone looking to enjoy a laugh riot with an intelligent slant should seek it out. Despite being over 60 years old, this screwball comedy still feels daisy-fresh.

The Wrong Mans, BBC2

THE WRONG MANS, BBC2 Mathew Baynton and James Corden again prove themselves the right mans for the job

Mathew Baynton and James Corden again prove themselves the right mans for the job

The recent comedy awards on Channel 4 threw up little in the way of surprises – or, indeed, laughter for that matter. It was, however, notable for the first real-time, on-screen mugging at an awards bash, as Harry Enfield strolled off with the Best Comedy Actor gong, leaving Mathew Baynton looking very much the wronged man. That James Corden wasn’t even nominated was another crime.

In Order of Disappearance

Stellan Skarsgård kicks off a killing spree in the frozen north of Norway

The frozen north of Norway seems an unlikely spot for a Serbian drug gang to be operating alongside a local mob, but this is the world which snow-plough driver Nils meets head on when avenging the death of his son. Throw in larger-than-life characters, cartoonish but very strong violence and a beautiful snowy backdrop and the result is the Norwegian film In Order of Disappearance, a revenge drama which doles out its thrills at a pace in total contrast to the bleak serenity of the landscape which defines this part of the world.

Some Like It Hot

SOME LIKE IT HOT Billy Wilder's peerless, deliriously funny sex-comedy is back on the big screen

Billy Wilder's peerless, deliriously funny sex-comedy is back on the big screen

In what is undoubtedly one of the earlier recorded examples of the single entendre, the original ad campaign for Some Like It Hot yelled “Marilyn Monroe and her Bosom Companions”.

DVD: Harold and Maude

Early Seventies black comedy which demonstrates love recognises no boundaries

That 1971’s Harold and Maude still confounds and delights in equal measure is a tribute to its timelessness. Despite evocative, period-specific music from Cat Stevens, and settings and trappings which place it as a film conceived and completed as the Sixties still cast a shadow, it still hinges on finely honed characterisations and a story which was, and remains, unique. Although mainstream, it played with the nature of romance and what is or isn’t acceptable in the day-to-day to such an extent that it continues to be both uncomfortable viewing and engender warm-hearted feelings.

DVD: The Grand Budapest Hotel

DVD: THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL A game of two halves in Wes Anderson’s hotel-set fantasia

A game of two halves in Wes Anderson’s hotel-set fantasia

After the initial wave of exhilaration which comes with experiencing the latest of director Wes Anderson’s fanciful creations wears off, the most striking aspect of The Grand Budapest Hotel is its formal compositions. The framing and centring are as strictly regimented as Alain Resnais’ Last Year in Marienbad and the palette is as impressive as Nicolas Winding Refn's more recent Only God Forgives.

Tammy

Melissa McCarthy hits the road in a self-penned effort that fails to live up to its promise

Melissa McCarthy has been one of the decade's most notable comic finds. Although she's been plugging away for years on TV, as a stand-up, in sketch troupe the Groundlings and in various supporting roles, it was Bridesmaids and The Heat which brought her much deserved attention - including an Oscar nomination for her part in the former. More than just comic fodder, these characters were tough (but sensitive), smart and sisterly women railing against preconceptions and prejudice.