Ripper Street, BBC Two, Series 5 review – apocalypse looms in Victorian Whitechapel

★★★★ RIPPER STREET, BBC TWO, SERIES 5 Not so much a police series as a laboratory of lost souls

Not so much a police series as a laboratory of lost souls

There has always been an air of incipient doom hovering over Ripper Street, since the show is more of a laboratory of lost souls than a mere detective drama.

Andrew O'Hagan: The Secret Life review – troubling tales from the online underground

Shifting selves in the internet's twilight zone

Imagine that you come across a story by a journalist who, writing for the Daily Mail or The Sun, steals the identity of a real young man from a poor neighbourhood of south-east London. He had died of an overdose, aged 20, in 1984. Not knowing whether this kid’s immediate family still lived, the sleuth hi-jacks the name of an actual individual – just as, notoriously, undercover officers of the Metropolitan Police’s Special Demonstration Squad did when they infiltrated protest groups. 

The Mummy review – please don't let them make a sequel

★★ THE MUMMY Horror remake scuppered by absence of oomph

Horror remake scuppered by absence of oomph

The best bit is in the trailer. It's the scene where Nick Morton (Tom Cruise) and Jenny Halsey (Annabelle Wallis) are inside a stricken Hercules transport aircraft as it suddenly plunges vertically out of the sky, leaving its occupants in weightless limbo as they struggle frantically to find parachutes so they can bale out. But it's too late – the ground comes screaming up to meet them, and poor Tom can't get out.

DVD/Blu-ray: The Naked Civil Servant

★★★★★ DVD/BLU-RAY: THE NAKED CIVIL SERVANT John Hurt astounding as Quentin Crisp: welcome restoration of Jack Gold's classic television drama

John Hurt astounding as Quentin Crisp: welcome restoration of Jack Gold's classic television drama

For those of us still mourning John Hurt, this lovely HD restoration of the actor’s favourite film is a real joy. Made in 1975 for Thames Television, it’s stood the test of time remarkably well.

h.Club 100 Awards: Nina-Sophia Miralles, editor of Londnr Magazine

NINA-SOPHIA MIRALLES, EDITOR OF LONDNR The winner of The Hospital Club's 2016 Rising Stars category runs a cultural website

The winner of The Hospital Club's 2016 Rising Stars category runs a cultural website

The Hospital Club's h.Club 100 Awards are so-called because they consist of 10 awards in 10 categories, each of which has 10 nominees. Nine of the awards are confined to a specifc area of the creative industries (stage, theatre, music etc). The exception is the Rising Stars category, open to anyone under the age of 25. Last year's winner was Nina-Sophia Miralles, founding editor of the online magazine Londnr.

Peter Ackroyd: Queer City - London's gay life over two millennia

PETER ACKROYD: QUEER CITY London's gay life over two millennia

The 'other' history of the metropolis told in magpie detail

2017 is proving the year of celebrating queer. To mark 50 years of the decriminalisation of homosexuality, we are enjoying a host of cultural and historical reminders, from Tate Britain to the British Library, and many locations in between, all affording a degree of prominence that over most of the last century would have been inconceivable.

Sgt Pepper's Musical Revolution, BBC Two review - how the Fab Four changed pop music forever

SGT. PEPPER'S MUSICAL REVOLUTION Howard Goodall's forensic examination of the making of a masterpiece

Howard Goodall's forensic examination of the making of a masterpiece

It probably hasn’t escaped your notice that we are celebrating the 50th anniversary of Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, the triumphant vindication of the Beatles' decision to quit touring and instead exploit the possibilities of the recording studio. Could there be anything new to say about an album so thoroughly analysed, anatomised, eulogised and mythologised?

Richard Goode, Royal Festival Hall

★★★★ RICHARD GOODE, RFH The American master pianist's recital casts rewarding light on chewy repertoire

The American master pianist's recital casts rewarding light on chewy repertoire

How to change the way we hear Chopin and Beethoven: play Bach first. Richard Goode opened his Royal Festival Hall recital with the Partita No.6 in E minor, perhaps the most enigmatic and challenging of its siblings.