The Party's Just Beginning review - a formidable debut

★★★★ THE PARTY'S JUST BEGINNING Karen Gillan reveals hidden talents as she pulls triple duty

Karen Gillan reveals hidden talents as she pulls triple duty

For an actor, there are few bigger risks than writing and directing your own film. Securing funding is pretty easy if you’re a household name, like Karen Gillan is, but that doesn’t mean your script is any good or your vision holds water. At their worst, these films can be vain and embarrassing affairs. At their best, you’re left wondering if there’s anything their star can’t do. The Party’s Just Beginning puts Gillan very firmly in the latter camp.

Joker review – a phenomenal Joaquin Phoenix on the mean streets of Gotham

BAFTA FILM AWARDS 2020 Joaquin Phoenix takes Leading Actor for 'Joker'

Forget the Marvel Cinematic Universe, this is comic book movie-making that is terrifyingly grounded in the everyday

When Joker won the Golden Lion in Venice in September, it was an unprecedented achievement, the first time a comic book-related film had won such a prestigious prize. But then, isn’t your typical comic book film. Starring a phenomenal Joaquin Phoenix, it’s seriously themed, brilliantly executed and quite extraordinary. 

Phoenix review - Norwegian family tragedy with an autobiographical slant

Mesmerising child performers but Camilla Strøm Henriksen's debut doesn't quite deliver

“You’re so meticulous,” says Astrid (Maria Bonnevie) to her teenage daughter Jill (impressive newcomer Yvla Bjørkaas Thedin) as they create a batik artwork together at the kitchen table. Little son Bo (Casper Falck-Løvås) looks on as he munches a jam sandwich. A happy domestic scene? Anything but. “Meticulous” isn’t even really a compliment, coming from this chaotic, mentally fragile mother.

Preludes, Southwark Playhouse review - journeying into the mind of Rachmaninoff

★★★★ PRELUDES, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE Journeying into the mind of Rachmaninoff

Dave Malloy's innovative musical immerses us in a creative crisis

Where does music come from? That’s the vital question posed to Sergei Rachmaninoff in Dave Malloy’s extraordinary 2015 chamber work, as the great late-Romantic Russian composer – stuck in his third year of harrowing writer’s block – tries to relocate his gift. It comes from others and from himself; from past and present; from everything and nothing. It is ephemeral, and yet it is at the core of his very being.

Suicidal: In Our Own Words, Channel 5 review - why are so many men killing themselves?

★★★★ SUICIDAL: IN OUR OWN WORDS, CHANNEL 5 Why are so many men killing themselves?

Harrowing and heartbreaking documentary in which six male mental health patients open up

September 10 is World Suicide Prevention Day, and Channel 5 marked the occasion with this sobering documentary. Focusing on male suicide – incredibly, now the UK’s biggest killer of men under 45 – it studied six patients at the Riverside Mental Health Centre in Hillingdon, west London. The results were both harrowing and heartbreaking.

Fleabag, Wyndham's Theatre review - superb swansong for modern classic

★★★★★ FLEABAG, WYNDHAM'S Final outing for Phoebe Waller-Bridge as her iconic creation

Final outing for Phoebe Waller-Bridge as her iconic creation

We're saying goodbye to a much treasured friend. Fleabag will live on, of course – other actresses have and will inhabit the role – but Phoebe Waller-Bridge, its creator, has said this short run at Wyndham's Theatre is the last time she will perform the character on stage.

Thunder Road review - potent and poignant debut feature

A triumph for Jim Cummings as writer, director and lead actor

This is a painful and poignant study of character-disintegration, and a triumph for its writer, director and star Jim Cummings. He plays small-town police officer Jim Arnaud, a man trying to do his best while a rising sea of troubles threatens to drown him.

Alastair Campbell: Depression and Me, BBC Two review - is there an alternative to a life on anti-depressants?

★★★★ ALISTAIR CAMPBELL: DEPRESSION AND ME, BBC TWO Is there an alternative to a life on anti-depressants?

Former spin doctor explores solutions to his mental health issues

Persistent depression is debilitating and terrifying, as Alastair Campbell illustrated vividly in this punchily-argued film. We first saw him looking like a disturbed, miserable ghost, as he described in his video diary a sudden plunge into depression at New Year, 2018. He seemed to be ebbing away before our eyes.

David Harewood: Psychosis and Me, BBC Two review - actor confronts his painful past

★★★★ DAVID HAREWOOD: PSYCHOSIS AND ME, BBC TWO Actor confronts his painful past

The 'Homeland' star explores the mental health crisis he suffered in his twenties

In the week that the Jeremy Kyle show has been yanked permanently off air after the death of one of its vulnerable guests, the timing couldn’t have been better for the BBC to show how sensitively the old-school broadcaster handles contributors with mental health problems.