Album: Chuck Prophet - Wake the Dead

★★★★ CHUCK PROPHET - WAKE THE DEAD Rock'n'roll master dances past the graveyard

Rock'n'roll master dances past the graveyard with cumbia rhythms and quizzically cocked eyebrow

Chuck Prophet speaks the old language of rock’n’roll as if it’s bright and new. His long gone band Green On Red were R.E.M.’s Eighties peers, and as rock’s cultural tide has receded, his loyalty to its spirit of liberty, askance at authority and place with those clinging to or embracing the bottom rung has become a natural act of faith.

Griselda, Netflix review - Sofía Vergara excels as the Godmother of cocaine trafficking

★★★ GRISELDA, NETFLIX Sofía Vergara excels as the Godmother of cocaine trafficking

How Colombia's Griselda Blanco brought vice to Miami

When Colombian drug potentate Pablo Escobar made his comment that “the only man I was ever afraid of was a woman named Griselda Blanco,” he ensured that Ms Blanco would achieve immortality in the annals of crime. Netflix’s new series about Blanco, starring and produced by Sofía Vergara, claims to depict Blanco’s life “as faithfully as possible”, though that famous line “when the legend becomes fact, print the legend” feels a bit nearer the mark.

Album: Kali Uchis - Orquídeas

Fourth album from US star is peppy, sensual and seasoned with musical spice

Colombian-American singer Kali Uchis hasn’t made large waves this side of the Atlantic. Perhaps this is because her appeal has partly been rooted in Latin communities across the US and, indeed, Central and South America. Last year her third album, Red Moon in Venus, reached the Top 5 of the US album charts. At the time she said she already had her next album ready, a Spanish language affair. This is it and it’s a slightly feistier creature than its woozily narcotic predecessor.

Memories of My Father review - the richness of childhood, the cruelty of history

★★★★ MEMORIES OF MY FATHER Resonant adaptation of Colombian family memoir

A moving father-son bond resonates in adaptation of Colombian family memoir

Spanish director Fernando Trueba’s Memories of My Father adapts the Colombian writer Héctor Abad Faciolince’s 2006 family memoir, which was published in English as Oblivion: the Spanish-language title of both book and film, El Olvido Que Seremos (“Forgotten We’ll Be”), more liter

Album: Kali Uchis - Sin Miedo (del Amor y Otros Demonios) ∞

★★★★ KALI UCHIS - SIN MIEDO (DEL AMOR Y OTROS DEMONIOS) ∞ Rising Colombian-American star takes a likeable turn into beats-laden easy listening

Rising Colombian-American star takes a likeable turn into beats-laden easy listening

Kali Uchis is a superstar in the making. But she’s seemed that way for a few years and, despite making waves in the US, has not crossed over on the scale her talent deserves.

Our World: Colombia - Saving Eden, BBC Two review - the war is over, but can they save the rainforests?

★★★★ OUR WORLD: COLOMBIA - SAVING EDEN, BBC TWO The war is over, but can they save the rainforests?

Short but tightly-focused film tells a bittersweet story

Stories of the destruction of the natural environment are depressingly common, but Frank Gardner brought a fresh slant to this punchy account of a botanical expedition to Colombia (BBC Two). Best known as the BBC’s security correspondent, Gardner was partially paralysed in a terrorist attack in Riyadh in 2004, but was determined that this wouldn’t stop him.

Monos review - teenage guerrillas raising havoc

★★★ MONOS Visually stunning, brilliant soundtrack - but a lack of heart to Alejandro Landes's darkness

Visually stunning and a brilliant soundtrack - but there's a lack of heart to Alejandro Landes's darkness

In the opening scene of Alejandro Landes’s strange, beautiful but finally unsatisfying Monos, eight teenage guerrillas are playing football blindfold on a high mountain plateau. Why the blindfolds? Perhaps to warn us not to expect any light to be thrown on whys and wherefores in this unsettling, visually stunning film, with its echoes of Lord of the Flies and Apocalypse Now.