Lorrie Moore: I am Homeless If This is Not My Home review - between this world and the next

A tale of loss and mourning that flows with dreamy logic

Lorrie Moore’s brief but haunting I Am Homeless If This Is Not My Home is a bizarre, unsettling read. At times it’s a road trip, at others a romance, then supernatural horror, Greek tragedy, or an epistolary short story nestled within the larger text. Underlying this, however, is a poetic tale of grief and loss, and of how it’s almost impossible to be free of the dead when they are still living (sometimes corporally) for the mourner.

Everybody Loves Jeanne review - charmingly weird romantic comedy

The inner voice made manifest: Céline Devaux's debut feature is funny and touching

Céline Devaux, known for her award-winning short films, wrote, directed and drew the animations for her charming, funny debut feature, which takes the concept of the critical inner voice and runs with it.

Blanche Gardin is brilliant as Jeanne, whose revolutionary invention, a structure that traps and removes microplastics from the ocean - it's called Nausicaa, which doesn't bode well - ends up as a dismal failure at its launch.

Nick Laird: Up Late review - attention lapses

A collection of uneven elegies from a poet who could have given us more

A few pages before the titular poem of Up Late, Nick Laird describes a haircut in a bathroom mirror, and finds a possible art form reflected back: "something like a poem / glances back / from the deep inside." The lines are broadly representative of the image-repertoire and diction of Laird’s latest work: glassiness, fish and questions of depth perception loom large.

The Damned Don't Cry review - a Moroccan mother and son on the margins

★★★★ THE DAMNED DON'T CRY A Moroccan mother and son on the margins

Fyzal Boulifa's impressive second feature explores class, shame and identity

British-Moroccan director Fyzal Boulifa’s second feature is a departure from his first, the brilliant and disturbing Lynn + Lucy of 2020. That was set on an Essex housing estate; this one takes place in Morocco.

Song from Far Away, Hampstead Theatre review - gentle monologue from a man grappling with grief

★★★ SONG FROM FAR AWAY, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Gentle monologue of a grieving man

Will Young brings sweetness to a thin scenario

Lucky Will Young: the production of the Simon Stephens monologue Song from Far Away that he is delivering at the Hampstead Theatre is directed by Kirk Jameson, not Ivo van Hove.

The modish Dutch director of the initial UK staging, seen at the Young Vic in 2015, stripped his actor naked for much of the performance. Young, though, is allowed a loose white shirt and black trousers throughout. 

War Pony review - life on the Pine Ridge reservation in south Dakota

★★★★ WAR PONY Life on the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota

Riley Keough and Gina Gammell's impressive directorial debut, written in collaboration with two Native Americans

Set on the lands of the Oglala Lakota in South Dakota, War Pony focuses, in a hazy way, on the lives of 23-year-old Bill (Jojo Bapteise Whiting), who has two toddler sons with two different mothers, and 12-year-old Matho (Ladainian Crazy Thunder) who seems to have no mother at all. Both are struggling to get by. Drugs, violence and chaos rule on the Pine Ridge reservation. The women are mainly exasperated with the men. A poodle called Beast also plays an important role.

Amanda review - too-intense Gen Z-er seeks a friend, boyfriend, anything

★★★★ AMANDA Deft Italian comedy about a rich twentysomething's existential crisis

Deft Italian comedy about a rich twentysomething's existential crisis

Needy, truculent, and aggressive, an in-your-face stick of intensity and guilt-inducing melancholy, privileged young Amanda in Carolina Cavalli’s downbeat comedy is the girl no one wants to end up talking to in the kitchen at parties. 

So empathetic is Benedetta Porcaroli’s portrayal of this emotional aggressor, however, that it’s difficult not to root for her. Especially if, per William Blake, one’s bag is eternal night rather than sweet delight. 

Aspects of Love, Lyric Theatre review - not much has actually changed

★★★ ASPECTS OF LOVE, LYRIC THEATRE Not much has actually changed 

Andrew Lloyd Webber's 1989 musical resurfaces, its luscious score and curious logic jointly intact

Love may change everything, as we're reminded multiple times during Andrew Lloyd Webber's rabidly polyamorous Aspects of Love, but certain things about this 1989 London hit (and subsequent Broadway flop) are fixed.

Beau is Afraid review - life's ordeals in lengthy detail

★★★ BEAU IS AFRAID Stamina from Joaquin Phoenix & a scene-stealing turn from Patti LuPone

Stamina from Joaquin Phoenix and a scene-stealing turn from Patti LuPone

Life's journey is a challenge, and then some, for Beau Wasserman (Joaquin Phoenix), the beleaguered Odysseus/Job  (you choose!) equivalent figure at the savage heart of Ari Aster's new film Beau is Afraid. But imagine surviving unimaginable ordeals on the long road of existence only to be met at the end by the Broadway legend Patti LuPone?

A Brief List of Everyone Who Died, Finborough Theatre review - 86 years, punctuated by fun and funerals

★★★★ A BRIEF LIST OF EVERYONE WHO DIED, FINBOROUGH THEATRE New play that mines the bittersweet moments of a long life 

Jacob Marx Rice's new play mines the bittersweet moments of a long life

The family pet dies. It’s a problem many parents face, and when Gracie learns from her evasive father that her dog isn’t just gone, but gone forever, her five-year-old brain cannot process it and so begins a lifelong relationship with deaths, funerals and grief.