20,000 Species of Bees review - a marvel of a debut

A film about a trans kid and bees that floats like a butterfly

Are we all getting older, or are film award-winners getting younger? Sofía Otero won the Silver Bear for best lead performance at the Berlin Film Festival this year at the age of just nine. To achieve that, it surely needs to be one of the best moppet turns of all time – and I think it quite possibly is.
 
She plays an eight-year-old boy who doesn’t answer to the name of Aitor even when he’s gone missing and dozens of searchers are yelling it out.

A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings, Brighton Festival 2023 review - Gabriel Garcia Marquez in a creative retelling

A wonderfully sweet and simple tale of magical realism

Brighton Festival has a knack for choosing children’s theatre that is in equal measure as magical and captivating as it is simple and easy to understand. It’s an equation that means both adults and children alike can be sure to have an experience that promotes creative imagination, stimulating conversation and calm reflection.

Max Porter: Shy review - an ode to boyhood and rage

★★★★★ MAX PORTER: SHY Joy and despair in a subversive treatment of teenage years

Porter navigates joy and despair in a subversive treatment of teenage years

Max Porter continues his fascination with the struggles of youth in his newest release, Shy: his most beautifully-wrought writing to date, an ode to boyhood and a sensitive deconstruction of rage, its confused beginnings, its volatile results, and all the messy thoughts in between.

Dick and Dom in da Bungalow, Touring review - Bogies, bottoms and other childish fun

★★★★ DICK AND DOM IN DA BUNGALOW Bogies, bottoms and other childish fun

20th anniversary tour for children's TV presenters

Judging by the average age of people in the audience, many of those who enjoyed Dick & Dom in da Bungalow when it aired on the BBC in the early Noughties were already adults. There was, though, a smattering of youngsters near their bedtime – good to see, as one of the most enjoyable elements of the weekend morning BBC children’s show, presented by Richard (Dick) McCourt and Dominic (Dom) Wood, was its anarchic attitude to rules.

Camp Bestival Shropshire, Weston Park review - a musical mixed bag for the pre-teens and their parents

★★★★ CAMP BESTIVAL SHROPSHIRE Inaugural West Midlands’ festival for Rob Da Bank’s Camp Bestival crew

Inaugural West Midlands’ festival for Rob Da Bank’s Camp Bestival crew

When I first started going to music festivals in the late 80s and early 90s, they were all wild celebrations of bacchanalian excess. Children were nowhere to be seen and there was always a crustie on hand, openly plying a wide array of brain spanglers, if that was what you wanted.

The Railway Children Return review - honourable wartime sequel

★★★ THE RAILWAY CHILDREN RETURN Honourable wartime sequel misses the original's magic

A thoughtful update welcomes back Jenny Agutter, but misses the original's magic

You can’t simulate nostalgia, or the dusting of urgent magic which made The Railway Children so immediately poignant. Lionel Jeffries wrote and directed the 1970 film with the same special affinity for vintage childhoods he showed in his heart-piercing ghost story The Amazing Mr Blunden (1972).

It was his emotional investment which made generations unquestioningly sympathise with the film’s privileged family fallen on hard times – a standby of middle-class children’s literature revived as recently as Mary Poppins Returns.

For Black Boys Who Have Considered Suicide When The Hue Gets Too Heavy, Royal Court review - Black joy, pain, and beauty

★★★★★ FOR BLACK BOYS WHO HAVE CONSIDERED SUICIDE..., ROYAL COURT With boisterous lyricism, Ryan Calais Cameron explores what it means to be a Black man

With boisterous lyricism, Ryan Calais Cameron explores what it means to be a Black man

The title is so long that the Royal Court’s neon red lettering only renders the first three words, followed by a telling ellipsis. But lyrical new play For Black Boys Who Have Considered Suicide When the Hue Gets Too Heavy lives up to its weighty name.

Blu-ray: Sweet Thing

★★★★ BLU-RAY: SWEET THING A stirring comeback for writer-director Alexandre Rockwell

A stirring comeback for writer-director Alexandre Rockwell

The independent filmmaker Alexandre Rockwell has flown under the radar since he made his name with the Cassavetes-vibed 1992 New York comedy In the Soup. He recently explained that his career was sabotaged by Harvey Weinstein, who was jealous, Rockwell suspects, of his close friendship with Quentin Tarantino. The intervening years haven’t been fallow, but Rockwell’s 10th feature, the lyrical childhood mini-odyssey Sweet Thing (2020), represents a major comeback.