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TV

If you only watch one, make it …

Last One Laughing UK

Prime Video

Summed up in a sentence The triumphant return of the unfailingly hilarious TV show featuring comedians trying to make each other laugh – while keeping a straight face.
What our reviewer said “This series leaves me helpless with laughter at least once an episode.” Rachel Aroesti

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Further reading Last One Laughing contestant Diane Morgan’s honest playlist: ‘I was mesmerised by Kate Bush and the Smurfs, so I had great taste’


Pick of the rest

Inside the Rage Machine

BBC iPlayer

Marianna Spring and Matt Motyl, a former staff researcher at Facebook and Meta. Photograph: BBC Studios

Summed up in a sentence Whistleblowers who once worked at Meta and X reveal the horrifying truth about the social media giants.
What our reviewer said “To see these companies’ machinations laid bare in under an hour, frequently by people who worked inside Zuckerberg’s factory or on the Twitter-to-X transition, until they couldn’t bear the guilt and fear any longer and left to become whistleblowers, is … quite something.” Lucy Mangan

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The Plastic Detox

Netflix

Summed up in a sentence A startling documentary following an epidemiologist’s attempt to help couples conceive by reducing their exposure to plastics – raising some genuinely troubling questions.
What our reviewer said “Do viewers of documentaries like this one really change their own lifestyles after watching them? The Plastic Detox states it plainly: we really should, and most of us have a lot of work to do.” Jack Seale

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Boarders

BBC iPlayer

Jodie Campbell, Georgina Sadler, Aruna Jalloh and Josh Tedeku in Boarders. Photograph: BBC/Studio Lambert/Alistair Heap

Summed up in a sentence The hugely impressive final series of the BBC’s sharp sendup of boarding school in the UK is a riot of sex, scandals and final exams.
What our reviewer said “There is something about Boarders that feels very real.” Micha Frazer-Carroll

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You may have missed…

The Fabulous Funeral Parlour

Channel 4

The Fabulous Funeral Parlour. Photograph: James Stack/Channel 4

Summed up in a sentence A camp, light and touching documentary about a glamorous funeral director shaking up the death industry.
What our reviewer said “The Fabulous Funeral Parlour tries to make us feel something new about the most universal experience there is. And it succeeds.” Micha Frazer-Carroll

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Film

If you only watch one, make it …

Dead Man’s Wire

In cinemas now

Dacre Montgomery and Bill Skarsgård in Dead Man’s Wire. Photograph: Stefania Rosini/Row K Entertainment

Summed up in a sentence Al Pacino, Colman Domingo and Myha’la excel in Gus Van Sant’s gripping take on the real-life events of 1977 when an Indianapolis businessman held his mortgage broker hostage.
What our reviewer said “The personae and performances of Pacino, Domingo and Myha’la complicate the psychopathic nastiness of the affair, and create something surreal and bizarre and often hilarious: a display of, not heartlessness, exactly, but a shrewd professional sense that pity and fear were emotions that could only benefit the kidnapper.” Peter Bradshaw

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Further reading Gus Van Sant: ‘My assistant wanted to erect a statue of Luigi Mangione. My generation thought: this is murder’


Pick of the rest

La Grazia

In cinemas now

Summed up in a sentence The Great Beauty director Paolo Sorrentino works once again with actor Toni Servillo, who plays an Italian president looking back on a career of empty rectitude that amplifies the leader’s despair.
What our reviewer said “La Grazia is a stylish, soigné film, ruminative and enigmatic. Like The Great Beauty it broods on the Romanità of the capital; the Romanness, the way in which its history is inscribed on its buildings for those who understand it. And the set-piece moments are tremendous: Mariano is guest of honour at a veterans’ dinner for Italy’s mountain infantry, the Alpini, and suddenly bursts into song with them.” Peter Bradshaw

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Further reading Paolo Sorrentino and Toni Servillo on smoking, cinema and secrets

Midwinter Break

In cinemas now

Lesley Manville and Ciarán Hinds in Midwinter Break. Photograph: Landmark Media/Alamy

Summed up in a sentence Brilliantly acted portrait of rupture and rapture – directed by Polly Findlay and starring Lesley Manville and Ciarán Hinds – about interpersonal and religious tumult in late middle age.
What our reviewer said “The film creates space for Hinds and Manville to give substantial, intimate, complex performances of the kind that most movies (of whatever sort) do not allow their leads, and Manville in particular is very moving.” Peter Bradshaw

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Further reading Lesley Manville’s finest films – ranked!

The Good Boy

In cinemas now

Summed up in a sentence Jan Komasa’s tale follows a couple, played by Stephen Graham and Andrea Riseborough, who plan to retrain a delinquent teen with a brutal regimen in a Kubrickian absurdist nightmare.
What our reviewer said “It’s a movie that could have been made at any time in the past 50 years, with high-concept provocations and talking points that feel like something from the age of Kubrick’s Clockwork Orange or Ôshima’s Max Mon Amour, or even, indeed, Skolimowski’s The Shout.” Peter Bradshaw

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The Killer

In cinemas now

Chow Yun-fat and Danny Lee in The Killer. Photograph: Everett Collection/Alamy

Summed up in a sentence Rerelease of John Woo’s 1989 Hong Kong action film starring Chow Yun-fat: a gun-filled melodrama of maximalist violence and surreal sentimentality.
What our reviewer said “With The Killer, Woo somehow became the Douglas Sirk of Hong Kong action cinema, in a gonzo melodrama that borrows from Magnificent Obsession … about the redemption of an assassin falling in love with a woman whose sightlessness he has inadvertently caused.” Peter Bradshaw

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Books

If you only read one, make it …

When the Forest Breathes by Suzanne Simard

Reviewed by Mythili Rao

Summed up in a sentence The maverick ecologist sets out her vision for the future.
What our reviewer said “When she’s not getting taken away from protests by the authorities, she’s dodging the flames of forest fires in the Cariboo mountains of British Columbia, exploring the Haida Gwaii archipelago (“Canada’s Galápagos”), or off learning Indigenous practices in the Amazon.”

Read the full review

Further reading ‘My ideas are a little revolutionary’: ecologist Suzanne Simard on intelligent forests, the climate and her critics


Pick of the rest

Solidarity by Rowan Williams

Reviewed by Joe Moran

Summed up in a sentence The former archbishop of Canterbury on what it really means to stand by someone.
What our reviewer said “For Williams, solidarity is hard work. It takes time and emotional labour to recognise our fellow humans, in both their implacable otherness and their commonality with us.”

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The Delusions by Jenni Fagan

Reviewed by M John Harrison

Summed up in a sentence A cosmic satire set in the afterlife.
What our reviewer said “The Delusions fizzes with impatience, invention and humour. Fagan’s targets are exactly what we’d hope: greed, politics, celebrity. Smartphone culture … anyone who thinks that by giving themselves up to the digital simulacrum they can evade not just inevitable death but actual life.”

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The Infinity Machine by Sebastian Mallaby

Reviewed by Tim Clare

Summed up in a sentence Inside the mind of an AI wunderkind.
What our reviewer said “Demis Hassabis was unusually bright from an early age. He started playing chess – and beating adults – at four. By five, he was competing in tournaments, sitting on a phone book on top of two stacked chairs so he could see the table.”

Read the full review


You may have missed …

The Book of Records by Madeleine Thien

Reviewed by Xan Brooks

Summed up in a sentence A dazzling near-future fable about refugees with cameos from Spinoza, Hannah Arendt and the Chinese poet Du Fu, this novel is shortlisted for the 2026 Climate Fiction prize.
What our reviewer said “This rich and beautiful novel is serious but playful; a study of limbo and stasis that nonetheless speaks of great movement and change.”

Read the full review

Further reading Madeleine Thien: ‘I ran in blizzards and -20C – all I wanted was to listen to Middlemarch’


Albums

If you only listen to one, make it …

Underscores: U

Out now

April Grey AKA Underscores. Photograph: Bailey Krawczyk

Summed up in a sentence Performing, writing and producing everything herself, April Grey pares back her hyperpop electronics for an album in thrall to 90s pop-R&B.
What our reviewer said “Grey certainly isn’t the only artist to look to that genre, in that era, for inspiration, but her take on it works incredibly well.” Alexis Petridis

Read the full review


Pick of the rest

Huw Marc Bennett: Heol Las

Out now

Huw Marc Bennett.

Summed up in a sentence The multi-instrumentalist puts his magical spin on traditional Glamorgan tunes, fusing the past, present and future.
What our reviewer said “As Bennett’s album drifts from the industrial valleys to the Gower peninsula, it thrums with a fitting beauty and energy.” Jude Rogers

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Kitty Whately and Julius Drake: Through the Centuries – Songs of Madeleine Dring

Out now

Summed up in a sentence Mezzo-soprano Whately and pianist Drake perform the fervent, fun and intoxicating works of a British musician whose fresh assessment is richly deserved.
What our reviewer said “This wide-ranging survey puts paid to any idea that Dring was not a serious composer.” Clive Paget

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Grace Ives: Girlfriend

Out now

Summed up in a sentence The New Yorker’s third album leaves behind her DIY origins to channel cult pop classics by Lorde and Sky Ferreira.
What our reviewer said “Girlfriend abandons caution in windswept, hyperdetailed songs that streak by like big city streetlights and shimmer with cosmic awe.” Laura Snapes

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Now live

Siegfried

Royal Opera House, London, to 6 April; in cinemas from 31 March

The Royal Opera’s new production of Siegfried. Photograph: The Royal Opera/Monika Rittershaus

Summed up in a sentence The third opera of Barrie Kosky’s take on the Ring cycle is a thoughtful and deft production.
What our reviewer said “It’s gratifying to see and hear the unfolding of a Ring cycle that’s so serious in its intent yet so deft in its touch.” Erica Jeal

Read the full review

Further reading ‘Siegfried wants to have fun, kill the dragon, meet the girl’: Andreas Schager on Wagner’s young bully

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culture
Last One Laughing to Dead Man’s Wire: the week in rave reviews

Last One Laughing to Dead Man’s Wire: the week in rave reviews

21 Mart 2026The Guardian

🤖AI Özeti

The article reviews the week's top cultural offerings, highlighting the return of the comedy show 'Last One Laughing UK' and the gripping film 'Dead Man’s Wire.' It features insights from various reviews, showcasing the humor and creativity in the comedy series while also addressing the intense themes of the film directed by Gus Van Sant. Overall, it presents a vibrant snapshot of current entertainment.

💡AI Analizi

The juxtaposition of a lighthearted comedy against the backdrop of a serious thriller illustrates the diverse landscape of contemporary entertainment. 'Last One Laughing UK' continues to captivate audiences with its unique format, while 'Dead Man’s Wire' challenges viewers with its exploration of darker human experiences. This week’s selections emphasize the power of storytelling in both eliciting laughter and provoking thought.

📚Bağlam ve Tarihsel Perspektif

As audiences seek both escapism and meaningful narratives, the cultural offerings this week cater to a wide range of tastes. 'Last One Laughing UK' exemplifies the enduring appeal of comedy, while 'Dead Man’s Wire' taps into the true crime genre's popularity, reflecting current societal interests.

This summary is based on reviews and opinions expressed in the original article.