The Serpent, BBC One review - tracking down the hippie-trail murderer

★★★ THE SERPENT, BBC ONE Tracking down the hippie-trail murderer

Charming psychopath Charles Sobhraj's motives remain elusive in real life and on-screen

“They’re only rich assholes. They don’t merit your concern,” serial killer and psychopath Charles Sobhraj (Tahar Rahim, A Prophet, Heal the Living), aka rich French gem-dealer Alain Gautier, tells his girlfriend Marie-Andrée in The Serpent as he steals passports and money from a couple of unconscious tourists he’s just drugged on a beach in Thailand in the mid-Seventies.

Album: Ammar 808 - Global Control/ Invisible Invasion

★★★★★ AMMAR 808 - GLOBAL CONTROL / INVISIBLE INVASION Fusion between the Maghreb and South India that's so good it explodes

Fusion between the Maghreb and South India that's so good it explodes

Ammar 808, named after the 1980s Roland drum machine TR-808 is the vehicle for Tunisian producer Sofyann Ben Youssef. He has been exploring, notably in Maghreb United (2018), a rich vein of resonance between the music of North Africa and electronic technology.

Sāvitri, Lauderdale House review - death and life in a Highgate garden

★★★★ SAVITRI, LAUDERDALE HOUSE Death and life in a Highgate garden

Hampstead Garden Opera works a little miracle with Holst's mystical music-drama

In seach of Orpheus, and following a route from the Hades of (thankfully) masked beings on the underground to Archway, then up to a windy, grassy plateau just below Highgate village, this wandering critic encountered another myth about the power of life over death.

Blu-ray: The Apu Trilogy

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: THE APU TRILOGY An enduring Bengali epic

An enduring Bengali epic from India's greatest filmmaker

Over the years, the legend of The Apu Trilogy has been much-repeated. Now widely considered India’s greatest filmmaker, Satyajit Ray was little more than a small-time commercial artist when, failing to find a sponsor for his script, he assembled what few funds he could in order to begin filming.

Theatre Lockdown Special 5: A solo show for the ages, Ibsen refreshed, and yet more frolicsome cats

THEATRE LOCKDOWN SPECIAL 5: A solo show for the ages, Ibsen refreshed, and yet more frolicsome cats

From a much-traveled one-man play to a continent-spanning National Theatre premiere, the theatrical week offers plenty so savour

No one can accuse the gods of streaming of failing to cast a wide net. That's even more so with an array of streaming opportunities over the next week that ranges from Off West End Ibsen given a second chance to shine to an online encounter with, yes, The Encounter, and, should you wish, with its protean creator and leading man, as well.

Aditi Mittal, Soho Theatre On Demand review - cows, mothers and fempowerment

★★★ ADITI MITTAL, SOHO THEATRE Cows, mothers and fempowerment

Indian comic on how she discovered feminism

“There are places in India where it's safer to be a cow than a woman” is a seemingly innocuous statement, but for Indian comic Aditi Mittal it was a dangerous one to make in a comedy show. It led to her arrest after a man complained that it was offensive to Hindus (and possibly cows, who knows).

Drawing the Line, Hampstead Theatre online review - modern history becomes dark farce

★★★★ DRAWING THE LINE, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Howard Brenton's play offers a lucid account of the Partition of India

Howard Brenton's play offers a lucid account of the Partition of India

This week’s gem from the Hampstead’s vaults is Howard Brenton’s political drama from 2013, telling the extraordinary, stranger-than-fiction story of Cyril Radcliffe and his 1947 mission: to arrange the Partition of India in just five weeks.

Oliver Craske: Indian Sun, The Life and Music of Ravi Shankar review - a master receives masterly treatment

★★★★★ OLIVER CRASKE: INDIAN SUN, THE LIFE AND MUSIC OF RAVI SHANKAR Definitive biography of India's most influential musician

Definitive biography of India's most influential musician

Ravi Shankar was one of the giants of 20th century music. A musician, composer and teacher, he had an extraordinarily fruitful career that spanned nine decades and reached the entire world. He did more to build a bridge between the music and spirituality of India and the West than any of his contemporaries.

The Test: A New Era for Australia's Team, Amazon Prime review - how ball-tampering scandal forced a cricket revolution

★★★★ THE TEST: A NEW ERA FOR AUSTRALIA'S TEAM, AMAZON PRIME How ball-tampering scandal forced a cricket revolution

Compelling inside story of coach Justin Langer's mission to rebuild the Australian side

It was in March 2018 that Australia’s cricketers were caught ball-tampering during a Test match in Cape Town. The resulting public outcry and sanctions against the guilty players and assorted backroom staff shook the Australian game to the core. There was a sense that the team had developed a bullying, arrogant attitude, and this was their well-deserved come-uppance.