Album: The Horrors - Night Life

A new line-up proves no hindrance to a band bringing electro-rock zip to the darkness

For fans of The Horrors, the headline here is that, 20 years into the career, for their sixth album, the band have lost two of their founding members. Original keyboard player Tom Furse has gone, as has drummer “Coffin” Joe Spurgeon, to be replaced, respectively, by Amelia Kidd of Scottish synthy post-punkers The Ninth Wave and Jordan Cook of alt-indie Welsh outfit Telegram.

Album: The Cure - Songs of a Lost World

Sadness and finality have rarely felt so life-affirming

Could melancholia be an elixir of creative youth? Or is it that sad people were never really that youthful, so age suits them? Certainly it seems that there was something in the water for so many of the foundational 80s indie bands who dealt in sadness, pain and existential angst that makes longevity suit them: The Jesus & Mary Chain, Dinosaur Jr., Throwing Muses, Ride, Slowdive just for starters have all somehow ambled into the 2020s on the creative form of their lives.

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice review - a lively resurrection

★★★ BEETLEJUICE BEETLEJUICE A lively resurrection

Tim Burton gets the old gang back from the dead

Sometimes love never dies and the dead never rot. A lot of water has flowed down the River Styx since Tim Burton’s first Beetlejuice film in 1988, but the bones of the original have held up surprisingly well, the madcap morbid spoof outliving many of its peers from the “high concept” era.

Album: Cassyette - This World Fucking Sucks

CASSYETTE - THIS WORLD FUCKING SUCKS Craftedly noisy and occasionally catchy

Debut from rising metal-punk-pop singer is craftedly noisy and occasionally catchy

The music of Brit alt-rocker Cassy Brooking, AKA Cassyette, comes from the emo school of pop-metal. Her 2021 debut single was, appropriately, called “Dear Goth”, she’s much-hyped by Kerrang, and has been tour support for both Bring Me the Horizon and My Chemical Romance. All these are apt reference points for the music on her debut album which is feisty, occasionally spicy, and – contradictorily – very precisely produced to suggest a gnarly aesthetic.

Album: EYE - Dark Light

★★★★ EYE - DARK LIGHT New band from MWWB singer Jessica Ball worthy of what came before

New band from MWWB singer Jessica Ball prove worthy of what came before

Skirting along the peripheries of doom metal, unbeknownst to almost everyone, there existed a band called Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard. Hailing from Wrexham, Wales, they created four albums that stand alone in their originality, combining massively bonged-out sludge-riffing with Cocteau-Twins-ish vocalising and Seventies space rock vibes.

Blu-ray: The Eternal Daughter

★★★★ BLU-RAY: THE ETERNAL DAUGHTER Tilda Swinton in a virtuoso double role

Joanna Hogg directs Tilda Swinton in a virtuoso double role

In Présages, Joanna Hogg talks about ghosts. This short film from 2023, commissioned by the Pompidou Centre, is included as one of the special features in the new BFI Blu-ray release of Hogg's intensely atmospheric The Eternal Daughter, with its virtuoso performance from Tilda Swinton in a dual role. Other special features include a Q&A with Hogg, Swinton and Francine Stock.

Jekyll and Hyde, Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh review - audacious contemporary resonances

★★★★ JEKYLL AND HYDE, LYCEUM THEATRE EDINBURGH Audacious contemporary resonances

Gothic excess mingles with more modern themes in a one-man transformation of Robert Louis Stevenson's novella

Evil walks among us. But it doesn’t arrive courtesy of mad scientists, bubbling potions and horrifying transformations. Instead, it comes from ordinary people surrendering themselves to their basest desires and resentments. Even worse, doing that feels… good.

Saltburn review - an uneven gothic romp

★★★ SALTBURN Tainted love among the toffs in Emerald Fennell’s latest

Tainted love among the toffs in Emerald Fennell’s latest

This seems to be a season for films majoring on bisexuality, with the awards round encompassing Ira Sachs’s Passages, Bradley Cooper’s Maestro and Emerald Fennell’s Saltburn, a story of high-class high jinks in a modern twist on Evelyn’s Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited.

Dracula: Mina's Reckoning, Festival Theatre Edinburgh review - audacious and entirely convincing

An all-female spin on Stoker's classic horror from the National Theatre of Scotland dares to challenge stereotypes

An all-female production of Bram Stoker’s Dracula – well, kind of – that transplants the novel’s more local action to the northeast of Scotland, and finds a bloody new calling for one of its less ostentatious characters? Elgin-born writer Morna Pearson is asking a lot from Stoker purists in her bold reimagining of the iconic, endlessly retold tale for the National Theatre of Scotland.

Rebecca, Charing Cross Theatre review - troubled show about a troubled house nonetheless diverts

★★★ REBECCA, CHARING CROSS THEATRE Troubled show about a troubled house diverts

Austrian musical finally arrives in London to entertain, but not quite thrill

There are times when it’s best to know as little as possible before taking one’s seat for a show – this new production of Rebecca would be a perfect such example.