Stelios review - Athenian rhapsody in blues

★★★ STELIOS Big fat Greek biopic hits the high notes but lacks punk spirit

Big fat Greek biopic hits the high notes but lacks punk spirit

The English title of a new film about the legendary singer-guitarist Stelios Kazantzidis, who popularised rebetiko, which is often called “the Greek blues”, may beguile some cinemagoers into thinking they are about to watch a biopic of the Cypriot entrepreneur, Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou, the founder of EasyJet. Luckily, Stelios is much more interesting than that.

Jonathan Buckley: One Boat review - a shore thing

Buckley’s 13th novel is a powerful reflection on intimacy and grief

One Boat, Jonathan Buckley’s 13th novel, captures a series of encounters at the water’s edge: characters converge like trailing filaments on the shoreline, lightly touching, their eventual separation assumed. Through this, Buckley pays profound attention to what otherwise might be inconsequential moments of connection, their soft, contemplative intimacies and banal departures.

To a Land Unknown review - the migrant hustle

A slick tale of two refugees striving and surviving in Athens

The Refugee Movie is rapidly becoming a genre unto itself, with elements of suspense and humanism woven together into something that’s very properly cinematic.

Films like Io Capitano and Green Border, tracking the tragic migrant trail to and through Europe, prick consciences and sweat palms in equal measure, but those two fine examples from last year were made by European directors on helicopter missions, as it were, to raise consciousness and to mine fresh seams of character.

Elektra, Duke of York's Theatre review - Brie Larson's London stage debut is angry but inert

Brie Larson makes a brave West End debut that, alas, misfires

We live in tragic times given over to cataclysmic events that require outsized emotions in return. That may be one reason to account for the uptick, therefore, in Greek drama, which includes not one but two Oedipi, various adaptations of Antigone, and the arrival on the commercial West End of the obvious companion piece to Oedipus, namely Elektra – the K in the title perhaps nodding to a landscape in which people exist to kill. 

Kaos, Netflix review - playing fast and profuse with the Greek myths

★★★ KAOS, NETFLIX Playing fast and profuse with the Greek myths

A rainbow of acting talent, but too many ideas thrown into the labyrinth

The ancient Greeks would probably have liked a lot about Charlie Covell‘s manipulation of mythic material. After all, Euripides was prepared to have a laugh about the notion of Helen whisked off to Egypt while a phantom version wrought havoc in Troy. Helen doesn’t figure in this mostly modern-dress gods-vs-humans drama, but so many other legendary figures do, as well as several you probably won’t have heard of.

Oedipus Rex, Scottish Opera, Edinburgh International Festival 2024 review - beautifully uncomplex

★★★★ OEDIPUS REX, SCOTTISH OPERA, EIF 2024 Beautifully uncomplex

Organic immersion for this memorable night at the museum

Immersive opera such as this can be tricky to pull off, but the magic of Roxana Haines’s new production of Stravinsky’s Oedipus Rex lies in its simplicity, letting the material organically weave around the audience without overcomplications or deliberately clever trickery.

Two Tickets to Greece review - the highs and lows of a holiday from hell

★★ TWO TICKETS TO GREECE The highs and lows of a holiday from hell

Laure Calamy, Olivia Côte and Kristin Scott Thomas star in a silly French comedy

Two women were best friends at school but they haven’t seen each other in years. One is an uptight divorcée, the other a free spirit. They have nothing in common any more but go on holiday to Greece together. A recipe for disaster, or what?

Sappho, Southwark Playhouse Elephant review - a glitzy celebration of sapphic love

★★ SAPPHO, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE ELEPHANT A glitzy celebration of sapphic love

Too much camp and not enough content in this tribute to the Greek poet

Who is Sappho? What is she? Not much is known about the influential Greek poet who was born some 2500 years ago. Her poetry was celebrated during her lifetime, but very little has survived. Those fragments that do exist speak of love, passion and longing.

Odyssey: A Heroic Pantomime, Charles Court Opera, Jermyn Street Theatre review - topsy-turvy Homer

★★★★ ODYSSEY: A HEROIC PANTOMINE, JERMYN STREET THEATRE Topsy-turvy Homer

Five heroic women and two instrumentalists go Hellenic, with panache

This is the show that launched a thousand puns, mostly ancient-Greek-oriented, and just as many corny rhymes, all delivered with high energy and greeted with joyful groans. To say it’s no epic is a compliment: Charles Court Opera’s boutique pantos rely upon perfect focus in small spaces, and this is a tight little craft, with five brilliant women firing up director/writer John Savournin’s script and David Eaton’s musical arrangements.