The Slaves of Solitude, Hampstead Theatre review - crude, over-dramatic and under-motivated

★★ THE SLAVES OF SOLITUDE, HAMPSTEAD Thin adaptation of Patrick Hamilton novel

New adaptation of Patrick Hamilton novel is thinly written and poorly staged

The Second World War is central to our national imagination, yet it has been oddly absent from our stages recently. Not any more. Nicholas Wright’s new play, an adaptation of Patrick Hamilton’s 1947 novel about lonely English women and American servicemen which premieres at the Hampstead Theatre in north London, effortlessly evokes the world of the Home Front deep in the middle of total war.

Call Me By Your Name review - a star is born in a heartbreaking gay romance

★★★★★ CALL ME BY YOUR NAME A star is born in a heartbreaking gay romance

Timothée Chalamet is an emotional knockout in a story both sensual and sad

It's not every day that an actor breaks your heart playing a character who surrenders his. But that's among the numerous achievements of Timothée Chalamet's knockout performance in Call Me By Your NamePlaying a culturally savvy and articulate 17-year-old American who comes of age sexually in sun-dappled northern Italy in 1983, Chalamet's work is a thing of wonder. As is the film, by turns ravishing and wrenching. 

The Snowman review - Michael Fassbender can't save Harry Hole

★★ THE SNOWMAN Michael Fassbender can't save Harry Hole

Unbalanced Jo Nesbø adaptation is an absurd misfit on the big screen

The crime novels of Jo Nesbø are rampaging Nordic psycho-operas. The author's Oslo detective Harry Hole is a lofty alcoholic who takes an outrageous pummelling in his pursuit of deranged serial killers. His many adventures fill the crime shelves in bookshops with their fat spines in flashing yellow upper case, but until now he's been kept from the screen.

Jane Eyre, National Theatre review - a dynamic treatment that just misses

JANE EYRE, NATIONAL THEATRE Athletic adaptation of Charlotte Brontë's novel doesn't quite fly

Athletic adaptation of Charlotte Brontë's novel doesn't quite fly

Sometimes you go to the theatre and in the first 10 minutes are convinced that the production is going to smash it, only to find by half time that it’s not. Initial delight gives way to mild irritation, and as a member of the ticket-buying public you draw a line under it and hope for better luck next time. A critic, however, must identify what didn’t work and why.

DVD/Blu-ray: Journey to the Centre of the Earth

More like journey to the dull heart of feeble '50s special effects

Oh dear. I thought that this was going to be one of those exciting fantasy films that livened up TV on weekend afternoons in my childhood, and that there would be kitschy special effects and ludicrous dialogue. But no, it's not 20,00 Leagues under the Sea, The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad or even Dr Doolittle.

Akram Khan's Giselle, Sadler's Wells review - the migrant crisis in a ballet thriller

★★★★★ AKRAM KHAN'S GISELLE, SADLER'S WELLS English National Ballet gives us the wilis, and then some

English National Ballet gives us the wilis, and then some

Of the many good reasons for seeing Akram Khan’s 2016 remake of Giselle – his work is often a headline event, for one – the most compelling is the company performing it. English National Ballet used to be the poor relation of its plusher sister national flagship in WC2. Not any more.

DVD/Blu-ray: The Legend of the Holy Drinker

★★★★ DVD/BLU-RAY: THE LEGEND OF THE HOLY DRINKER In vino veritas: Rutger Hauer surprises in Ermanno Olmi's adaptation of Joseph Roth's final fable

In vino veritas: Rutger Hauer surprises in Ermanno Olmi's adaptation of Joseph Roth's final fable

A decade after his masterpiece, The Tree of Wooden Clogs, won the 1978 Palme d’Or at Cannes, Italian director Ermanno Olmi took Venice’s 1988 Golden Lion for The Legend of the Holy Drinker (La leggenda del santo bevitore).

'Making it new' - Blake Morrison on adaptation, and how his new play came to life

'MAKING IT NEW' Blake Morrison on adaptation, and how his new play with Northern Broadsides 'For Love or Money' came to life

The writer on working with Northern Broadsides on 'For Love or Money'

Is there anything more terrifying for a playwright than the first day of rehearsals? For months, even years, you’ve been working and reworking the text, saying the words aloud to yourself in an empty room and imagining the actors saying them to a packed auditorium.

The Limehouse Golem review - horrible history with a twist

★★★ THE LIMEHOUSE GOLEM Bill Nighy's gimlet-eyed 'tec stalks a gothic, theatrical Victorian London

Bill Nighy steps into Alan Rickman's shoes to solve yet more murders in Victorian London

How many more throats must be slit in 19th-century London before the river of blood starts to clot? The Limehouse Golem follows the gory footprints of Sweeney Todd and various riffs on the Ripper legend. Based on Peter Ackroyd’s 1994 novel Dan Leno and the Limehouse Golem, this belated adaptation sensibly ditches the reference to a star of the music hall whose name recognition value isn’t what it was in the late Victorian East End.

Uncovering the identity of the eponymous golem is the hospital pass handed by his superior to Inspector John Kildare (Bill Nighy). The so-called golem, a killer so grim he is popularly assumed to be some sort of Talmudic phantasm, has been carving up randomly selected victims with horrifying thoroughness. At one crime scene a taunting message is scrawled on the wall in blood. Among the suspects are various scholars at the British Library including, randomly, Karl Marx and George Gissing. But Kildare’s more pressing concern is to solve the apparently unconnected death of John Cree (Sam Reid), who has been poisoned in his bed. The maid drops the wife in it and Lizzie Cree (Olivia Cooke) is soon in prison with the mob baying for her to swing. Kildare alone is convinced of her innocence.Olivia Cooke and Douglas Booth in The Limehouse GolemThe accused is a demure little thing who, long before her husband’s death, was already in mourning for the termination of her career as an actress. A series of flashbacks establish that Lizzie has risen to gentility from the poorest circumstances. Her mother turned a blind eye to the molestations of randy old pervs. Orphaned, she drifts towards the local music hall, a place of magical enchantment staffed by dwarves and trapeze artistes, presided over by the celebrated cross-dressing Dan Leno (Douglas Booth, pictured above with Olivia Cooke) and his managerial sidekick known as Uncle (Eddie Marsan in a bald wig).

Lizzie, at this point still a glottal-stopping Cockney sparrow, seizes her chance to become an entertainer by wowing the audience with a popular ditty, and a star is born. She is soon being courted by Cree, a stalker fan/aspiring playwright who eventually persuades her to tie the knot, only to insist she give up the stage. Men are besotted with Lizzie, music hall audiences adore her, and old stage lags think the world of her, while Kildare believes passionately in her innocence. She has to embody virtue, frigidity, pizzazz, ambition, and a little something extra, which is a lot to ask of any actress and it’s no criticism that it feels just beyond the reach of Olivia Cooke.Maria Valverde in The Limehouse GolemIt’s curious to witness Bill Nighy play someone so intensely buttoned up (Kildare’s rumoured homosexuality goes for nothing). The role was originally destined for the late Alan Rickman, and it’s possible to imagine what he might have done with it. Nighy turns in a gimlet-eyed tribute performance which is shorn of all his trademark tics and tricks and doesn’t quite compute. As Leno, Booth channels his inner Russell Brand without conveying the hypnotic appeal that, you assume, was his signature. Daniel Mays plays a PC Plod turn he could do in his sleep. There’s a nice turn from María Valverde (pictured above) as a smouldering other woman.

London’s underbelly is imagined by an outsider in the form of American director Juan Carlos Medina. There’s a slight school-of-Guy-Ritchie buzz to the chopping edits. The art direction, particularly pleasing in the theatre scenes, leaves little to the imagination at the various Gothic murder scenes. Though the pieces of The Limehouse Golem don’t quite fit together, Jane Goldman’s proto-feminist script saves the best with a splendidly clever twist that rewards your patience.

@JasperRees

Overleaf: watch the trailer for The Limehouse Golem

DVD/Blu-ray: Wakefield

★★★ DVD/BLU-RAY: WAKEFIELD Bryan Cranston plays a man who leaves his home in order to spy on it

Bryan Cranston plays a man who leaves his home in order to spy on it

The story of the man (and it usually is a man) who voluntarily disappears has been told and told again. Wakefield is based on an EL Doctorow short story which is itself inspired by a short story by Hawthorne, so it’s a narrative with deep ancestral roots. In this iteration Bryan Cranston plays Howard Wakefield, a New York salaryman who, thanks to a chance train delay one evening, decides on a whim to absent himself from his own life.