Hacks, Prime Video review - what's so funny about a career in comedy?

★★★★ HACKS, PRIME VIDEO What's so funny about a career in comedy?

Jean Smart sizzles in caustic Sin City drama

Acidic showbiz drama Hacks premiered on HBO Max in the States a year ago, and subsequently won a hatful of awards including three Emmys. Now, here it is on Prime Video, so we can get to see what all the fuss is about.

Deep Water review - not even laughably bad

Hugely disappointing return to the screen by British erotic thriller veteran Adrian Lyne

Patricia Highsmith must be spinning in her grave. This ridiculously incompetent adaptation of her 1957 crime novel lacks all suspense or credibility. It’s hard to believe that Adrian Lyne, responsible for huge box-office hits like the provocative thriller Fatal Attraction and the dodgy but watchable 9 ½ Weeks and Indecent Proposal, could make something quite so feeble as Deep Water.

A Hero review - a morality tale with no firm conclusions

★★★ A HERO A morality tale with no firm conclusions

Asghar Farhadi's new film explores a weak man's selfless act, but there's not enough at stake

A Hero, set in the ancient city of Shiraz in southwest Iran, revolves around Rahim (Amir Jadidi), a weak man with gleaming white teeth and a permanent smile.
 
He’s on leave from prison for the weekend, an odd concept in itself, as there are no restrictions to his movements and the whole set-up seems surprisingly lax and polite for what we might expect from an Iranian jail.

The Blood Pact, All 4 review - a (tax) inspector falls

★★★★ THE BLOOD PACT, ALL 4 Masterly denouement for third series of Dutch drama

Themes and characters entwine in the third series' masterly denouement

In Klem (meaning "clamp"’), we find ourselves in the calm, ordered and ordinary world of Amsterdam-Zuid. There are parents’ evenings to be attended, school plays to be watched. The area’s many pretty parks are just perfect for the early morning jog. Tall green bins stand in neat rows.

The Underground Railroad, Amazon Prime review - a horrifying ride through America's heart of darkness

★★★★ THE UNDERGROUND RAILWAY, AMAZON PRIME Barry Jenkins' adaptation is a horrifying ride through America's heart of darkness

Barry Jenkins's adaptation of Colson Whitehead's novel hits you with shock and awe

Many a director might have considered that televising Colson Whitehead’s novel The Underground Railroad was impossible, but Barry Jenkins, Oscar-winning director of Moonlight, has proved it can be done. His 10-part series for Amazon Prime is a remarkable achievement in its authorial depth and cinematic scope.

One Night in Miami review - black history come alive

★★★ ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI Regina King's directorial debut about a momentous meeting

Regina King's directorial debut about a momentous meeting

In 1964, Cassius Clay, NFL superstar Jim Nathaniel Brown, soul legend Sam Cooke and political firebrand Malcolm X gathered for one night in a dingy room at the Hampton Motel. It was a meeting that became a symbol of hope for black Americans. A photo, taken by Malcolm X would make the moment iconic, marking a shift away from the horrors of Jim Crow America to the passing of the Civil Rights Act. 

Best of 2020: TV

BEST OF 2020: TV A terrible year for many, but a priceless opportunity for television

A terrible year for many, but a priceless opportunity for television

Okay, so some people taught themselves the violin or wrote a novel, but under this year’s circumstances, it was inevitable that television (terrestrial, cable, online or otherwise) was going to clean up. With large chunks of the population forced to stay home, what could be more natural than to reach for the remote controller to magic up another bingeable boxset or Walter's latest noir thriller?

Little Fires Everywhere, Amazon Prime review - in every dream home a heartache

★★★★ LITTLE FIRES EVERYWHERE, AMAZON In every dream home a heartache

Mother and daughter duo shatter the calm of affluent Ohio

Reese Witherspoon has evolved into a growth industry on the new frontier of Big Television. Her production company Hello Sunshine has a heap of projects on the go with a range of networks, and following her success with Big Little Lies (for HBO), Little Fires Everywhere comes to you courtesy of Hulu (in the US) and Amazon Prime.

One World: Together at Home livestream review - all eight hours of it!

ONE WORLD: TOGETHER AT HOME Festival-friendly hedonist Caspar Gomez does the full eight hours of lockdown action

Theartsdesk's festival-friendly hedonist, Caspar Gomez, does the full eight hours of lockdown action

What times. They cancelled Glastonbury. Festival season 2020 disappeared. Then certain potions and compounds associated with festivaling ran dry. Well, the latter exist, of course. There’s a fellow over the road who’s still selling talcum powder and stinking chemo-skunk from his porch.

Selah and the Spades, Amazon Prime review - boarding-school cliques go gangster

★★★★ SELAH AND THE SPADES, AMAZON PRIME Boarding-school cliques go gangster

Tayarisha Poe's debut feature rethinks the American high-school movie

“They always try to break you down when you’re 17,” says queen bee Selah (Lovie Simone) in Tayarisha Poe’s impressive directorial debut. As leader of the Spades, one of the five Mafia-style ruling factions in the exclusive Haldwell boarding-school in Pennsylvania, Selah, with her waist-long braids and inscrutably cool managerial style, seems unbreakable. But not so fast. Here comes new girl Paloma (Celeste O’Connor), her sweet-faced nemesis.