DVD/Blu-ray: Another Round

★★★★★ DVD/BLU-RAY: ANOTHER ROUND Thomas Vinterberg's superbly ambivalent drama about drinking in Denmark

Thomas Vinterberg's superbly ambivalent drama about drinking in Denmark

Thomas Vinterberg’s Festen left me dumbstruck in the cinema in 1998 with its brilliant depiction of an incestuous, viciously glamorous family imploding over a family celebration. At the time, I hoped that my Danish mother never saw what looked, to all intents and purposes, like a home movie about her former life in Copenhagen. 

Blu-ray: To Sir, with Love

★★★★ BLU-RAY: TO SIR, WITH LOVE Rose-tinted but affecting look at life in a secondary modern

Rose-tinted but affecting look at life in a late 1960s secondary modern

To Sir, With Love is a very loose adaptation of ER Braithwaite’s autobiographical novel. Reflecting on his experiences as a teacher in London’s East End in the late 1940s, Braithwaite’s commentary (one of two provided here) advises us that “as you read the book, that’s how it was.

Album: Hilang Child - Every Mover

★★★ HILANG CHILD - EVERY MOVER Directness competes with the impressionistic on Ed Riman’s second album

Directness competes with the impressionistic on Ed Riman’s second album

The key tracks on Every Mover are “Play 'til Evening” and “Earthborne”. The first shimmeringly fuses anthemic, gospel-edged singing and surging instrumentation with a Philip Glass pulse and a trance-like throb. The second is a sparse contemplation, where piano underpins the vocals. Little else is heard. Despite the forthrightness of one and the intimacy of the other, there's a shared mood of yearning and the sense unease has invaded the creator’s life.    

Small Axe: Education, BBC One review - domestic drama concludes groundbreaking film series with quiet power

★★★★ SMALL AXE: EDUCATION, BBC ONE Systematic prejudice in the 1970s school system gives emotional punch to Steve McQueen's finale

Systematic prejudice in the 1970s school system gives emotional punch to Steve McQueen's finale

The fifth and final film in the Small Axe series is titled Education. At first, it appears this refers to the education of the central character, 12-year-old London boy Kingsley Smith, impressively played by Kenyah Sandy, who’s transferred to a disgraceful “School for the Educationally Subnormal” after being disruptive.

LFF 2020: Another Round review – a glass half empty

★★★ LFF 2020: ANOTHER ROUND Mads Mikkelsen seeks salvation in the bottom of a glass

Mads Mikkelsen excels as a teacher seeking salvation in the bottom of a glass. Plus first looks at David Byrne’s American Utopia and A Common Crime

In 2012, two great Danes, director Thomas Vinterberg and actor Mads Mikkelsen, teamed up for the powerhouse drama The Hunt, about a teacher victimised by his community when wrongly accused of abusing a pupil.

A Special School, BBC Wales review - heartwarming film about special needs education

★★★★★ A SPECIAL SCHOOL, BBC WALES  Heartwarming film about special needs education

Lovingly made and inspiring new series shows what's possible for students with special needs

This warm-hearted and informative documentary series about life in a Welsh special education school probably isn’t going to be a ratings buster for the BBC, but it’s one of the most touching and well-made shows I’ve seen in a long time.

First Person: Royal College of Music Director of Programmes Diana Salazar on a transformation in learning and teaching

FIRST PERSON: DIANA SALAZAR Royal College of Music Director of Programmes on a transformation in learning and teaching

The RCM’s corridors are quieter than usual but commitment to musical learning resounds

I wasn’t the only one who felt emotional when I left our beautiful building in South Kensington for the last time before lockdown. By that stage in mid-March the corridors had become quiet. The sense of loss was palpable: no concerts, no playing together, no conversation, no sound.

Women Make Film: Part One review - a mesmerising journey of neglected film

WOMEN MAKE FILM: PART ONE Cousins' latest opus seeks to give a voice to the women cinema neglected

Cousins' latest opus seeks to give a voice to the women cinema neglected

Equally ambitious in scope as his 900min ode to cinema The Story of Film: An Odyssey, Mark Cousins’ latest work, Women Make Film, is a fourteen-hour exploration of the work of female film directors down the decades.

The Atom: A Love Affair review - hot fusion and cold hearts

★★★ THE ATOM: A LOVE AFFAIR How the west fell out of love with nuclear power

New documentary explores how the west fell out of love with nuclear power

It’s fair to say that humanity’s relationship with nuclear energy over the last 50 years has had more highs and lows than a Spanish soap opera. From the Manhattan Project to Hinkley Point, it’s been a controversial technology that has promised both humanity’s salvation and damnation.