Love According to Dalva review - Belgian first time director tackles incest

★★ LOVE ACCORDING TO DALVA Belgian first time director tackles incest

Prize-winning debut feature focuses on a 12-year-old girl coming to terms with abuse

What is it that drives Belgian filmmakers to make sad and disturbing films about children? Is it the influence of the Dardennes Brothers, who over a 20-year career have made superb features exploring how brutally society treats its most vulnerable (Tori and Lokita, The Kid with a BikeThe Child among others)?

Rodéo review - heroine from the banlieues powers a rebel-teens saga

Impressive vérité portrait of a French dirt-biking gang

Reading an interview with the French director of Rodéo, Lola Quivoron, you come to realise her compelling film about dirt-bike-rider culture relied on a sage piece of casting. Despairing of ever finding a lead for her film project, Quivoron chanced upon Julie Ledru on Instagram and the first-time actor became a key creator of the narrative. 

Private Lives, Donmar Warehouse review - Coward revival cuts to the quick

Comedy classic plays up the pain that comes with pleasure

It's not often with Private Lives that you feel Amanda and Elyot are one step away from a visit to A&E. But such is the startling force of Michael Longhurst's Donmar Warehouse revival of arguably Noël Coward's most durable play that you are aware throughout of violence and pain as the flipside of passion at its most intense.

Album: Thomas Bangalter - Mythologies

An impressive move into composition, but where is the original voice?

Popular musicians “going classical” can work well. Look at Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood, at Richard Reed Parry and Colin Stetson from Arcade Fire, or at the late Jóhann Jóhannsson who had a successful career as indie and electronic musician in Iceland before becoming a globally beloved orchestral composer. Of course the boundaries are flimsy anyway these days, with the likes of Max Richter, Nils Frahm and Anna Meredith existing comfortably with one foot in the concert hall and one in the gig venue.

Album: M83 - Fantasy

Decent without breaking ground - French music project's new album flatters to deceive

It’s easy to forget in the age of TikTok and trending that “virality” doesn’t always cement a lasting mainstream awareness. This can be said of M83, the cinematic music project started in 2001 by French musician Anthony Gonzales.

Fabienne Verdier, The Song of the Stars (Le chant des étoiles), Musée Unterlinden, Colmar review - sacred and contemporary art in dialogue

The French artist is inspired by the Matthias Grünewald altarpiece

I have wanted to visit the Musée Unterlinden in Colmar for many years: the home of Matthias Grünewald’s masterpiece, the Isenheim Altarpiece (1512-1516), one of the great works of North European religious art. The opportunity finally arose in an oblique way, as the museum has been hosting a major exhibition by the French painter Fabienne Verdier.

Women at War, Netflix review - contrasting stories entwine during the chaos of World War One

★★★ WOMEN AT WAR, NETFLIX Contrasting stories entwine during the chaos of World War One

Passion, intrigue and heartbreak behind the front lines

A sprawling French-made drama set in the early days of the First World War in 1914, Women at War tells the stories of a quartet of female protagonists as they struggle to make sense of the mayhem which suddenly engulfs them.

Belcea Quartet, Wigmore Hall review - a riveting new string quartet

★★★★★ BELCEA QUARTET, WIGMORE HALL A riveting new string quartet

This Guillaume Connesson UK premiere is a fine companion to Schubert and Beethoven

I am proud – if surprised – to continue to be pretty much a lone voice in the wilderness singing the praises of the composer Guillaume Connesson (b.1970), whose substantial new string quartet “Les instants retrouvés” was heard at the Wigmore Hall on Saturday.

Nick Hasted's Top 10 Films of 2022

NICK HASTED'S TOP 10 FILMS OF 2022 Art and commerce have never been more polarised

Art and commerce have never been more polarised

Audrey Diwan’s French abortion drama Happening was the year’s hardest but most luminescent watch, as a fiercely intelligent young woman fights for her future survival as an artist in 1963, when illegal abortion requires wartime subterfuge and bloody violence to female bodies.