Lurker to Our Girls: the week in rave reviews

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BBC iPlayerSummed up in a sentence A deeply moving documentary celebrating the lives of the three girls killed in an attack on their dance class last year – and following the powerful way their parents dealt with the tragedy.What our reviewer said “No children were exactly like these three, and it’s a privilege to know them a little through home movies and their parents’ words.” Jack SealeRead the full reviewFurther reading One Day in Southport review – a sombre portrait of how a tragedy was hijackedChannel 4Summed up in a sentence An impeccably made documentary profiling the horrors of John Smyth, possibly the most prolific serial abuser ever associated with the Church of England.What our reviewer said “The film gives all its participants’ contributions time to breathe, and time for the viewer to reflect on the many delicate, intelligent insights offered.” Lucy ManganRead the full reviewChannel 4Summed up in a sentence Lovable prankster-satirist Oobah Butler tries to get rich quick.

What our reviewer said “Butler has managed to strip the aspiration from extreme wealth, demonstrate the false promises of hustle culture, show how much of the crypto-CEO world is built on sand and hot air, and prove once again his appealing combination of wry bravado and scrappy relatability.” Rachel AroestiRead the full reviewFurther reading A documentary-maker’s wild attempt to strike it rich in 90 daysIn cinemas nowSummed up in a sentence A Hollywood hanger-on thriller starring Théodore Pellerin as a desperate wannabe who attaches himself to a singer on the rise.What our reviewer said “There’s something remarkably assured about Alex Russell’s attention-demanding thriller, a buzzy Sundance debut that’s made with an unusual amount of self-awareness.” Benjamin LeeRead the full reviewFurther reading Obsession, blackmail and Instagram: inside Lurker, the year’s most compelling thrillerIn cinemas nowSummed up in a sentence Bing Liu’s film is an unflinching portrait of an undocumented Uyghur immigrant and a traumatised US veteran whose fragile connection is strained by their pasts.What our reviewer said “The film shows how the two slip into a limbo, drifting and circling around each other.

Perhaps Aishe isn’t sure she wants to commit to the moody and boozy Skinner who can disappear for days at a time; Skinner isn’t sure he really understands the abyss of cultural and historical sadness from which his new girlfriend has appeared.” Peter BradshawRead the full reviewIn cinemas nowSummed up in a sentence Jack Nicholson stars as an abusive father who is tipped over the edge in Stanley Kubrick’s magnificently capacious spooker, rereleased this week for its 45th anniversary.What our reviewer said “Nicholson’s performance is a thrillingly scabrous, black-comic turn, and the final shot of his face in daylight is a masterstroke.” Peter BradshawRead the full reviewFurther reading ‘Extreme heebie-jeebies’: writers on their scariest movies of all timeIn cinemas nowSummed up in a sentence A period drama parody with some decent and often smart gags and a game cast including Damian Lewis and Thomasin McKenzie.What our reviewer said “This enjoyable silver-spoon romp packs all of its 97 minutes with jokes and bits ranging from the puerile to the genuinely funny, proving that there may yet be more to wring from eat-the-rich satire.

” Adrian HortonRead the full reviewPrime VideoSummed up in a sentence Charlie Cox and Zooey Deschanel co-parent a depressed dog in a by-the-book Christmas romcom to appeal to animal lovers.What our reviewer said “Though not given much to do besides ‘be depressed’, Gus the Dog flops on the floor and whines convincingly – he’s no Messi in Anatomy of a Fall, but still a very good boy.” Adrian HortonRead the full reviewReviewed by Charlie EnglishSummed up in a sentence A deeply researched account of the controversial businessman’s rise and his shocking demise on board the Bayesian.What our reviewer said “As Katie Prescott sets it out in this excellent biography, Lynch was a monstrous man in many ways, but a gifted one.”Read the full reviewReviewed by Clare ClarkSummed up in a sentence The third volume in the hit Danish timeloop series.

What our reviewer said “As her focus widens, Balle introduces some welcome flashes of humour while sustaining the compulsively hypnotic effect of the first two books.”Read the full reviewFurther reading ‘How can one day be so voluminous?’: the Danish author who has written her own version of Groundhog DayReviewed by Sophie McBainSummed up in a sentence A guide to safely navigating the dehumanising world of social media.What our reviewer said “Alderman has a keen eye for the many subtle ways that digital media is changing us psychologically, and she is wise to note these shifts are often double-edged.”Read the full reviewFurther reading Naomi Alderman: as AI floods our culture, here’s why we must protect human storytelling in gamesReviewed by Selma DabbaghSummed up in a sentence A multilayered, magical realist tale of Trinidad and its people.What our reviewer said “Ever Since We Small is deft, confident and big-hearted.

Women curse, guide and heal, while love misleads, empowers and is satisfyingly capable of surmounting if not all, then at least a lot.”Read the full reviewReviewed by Joanna BriscoeSummed up in a sentence The novel behind the film out next month, starring Paul Mescal as Shakespeare and Jessie Buckley as his wife, Agnes, who suffer a family tragedy when the plague comes to Stratford.What our reviewer said “O’Farrell is simply outstanding.Within pages, she can inhabit the mind of an owl, of a great playwright, of a dying boy.Immersive, at times shockingly intimate … Hamnet is, above all, a profound study of loss.

”Read the full reviewFurther reading Why Herefordshire was the perfect stand-in for Shakespeare’s Stratford in the new film of HamnetFor the year’s outstanding releases, explore the Guardian’s best of 2025 music coverage, including its ongoing countdown of the year’s best rock and pop albums and songs, as well as the best classical recordings
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Rowing’s answer to snowcross, BMX and beach volleyball is coming to LA

At a point when most rowers are pounding away on rivers in the wind and rain through the dark winter months, a new breed are honing their skills in brighter climes surrounded by sun, sand and waves, all the while dreaming of the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.Out of 17 sports that proposed an extra discipline to the International Olympic Committee, rowing came out on top with its beach sprints format added to the LA 2028 programme. While many may have noticed the addition of five new sports in baseball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse and squash, a mini-revolution is happening on the water within a sport that will no longer have a lightweight category but will have five coastal rowing events in 2028.Coastal beach sprints shake up this most traditional and predictable of sports by taking the core elements of rowing – a need for extreme levels of fitness and psychological toughness – and adding new layers of jeopardy and a beach-party vibe. The discipline involves a head-to-head format and begins on land with athletes running down the beach and jumping into their boats at the water’s edge, then racing out around a buoy before hurtling back to dry land, leaping out of their boats and sprinting up the beach

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Joshua and Paul provide pitiful spectacle and the worst is there’s more to come | Donald McRae

Jake Paul’s mouth opened wide, and his eyes became huge glazed saucers, as he sank to the canvas in shock and awe after a pulverising right hand from Anthony Joshua finally ended the circus in Miami late on Friday night. It looked as if Paul was trying to say “Wow!” as the severity of impact registered in his scrambled brain.Pinned in a corner of the ring midway through the sixth round, Paul could no longer run or cling to Joshua’s legs like a forlorn little boy as the gravity of boxing enveloped him. Instead, as he tried to absorb the punch that broke his jaw in two separate places, Paul was lost in his utterly stunned moment.So this is how it feels, and looks, to be hit hard by a real boxer, an Olympic gold medallist and former world heavyweight champion

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Mitchell Starc urges ICC to take action on Snicko as confidence in system dwindles

The Australian fast bowler Mitchell Starc has urged the International Cricket Council to step in and pay for a standard suite of umpiring technologies following a collapse of confidence in the Ashes’ decision review system during the Adelaide Test.The England team were left frustrated when the miscalibrated Snicko system cost them the crucial wicket of Alex Carey on the first day of the Test, and coach Brendon McCullum lodged a complaint in the wake of the decision.Day two only amplified calls for the system to be replaced after two more contentious decisions were made when Jamie Smith was at the crease, the first giving him a reprieve despite the batter appearing to glove the ball. Amid the Australians’ exasperation, Starc could be heard on the stump mic declaring Snicko should be “sacked”.Speaking after the Test, the left-arm paceman said he understands how fans, officials and broadcasters have become frustrated

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NFL week 16: Steelers edge Lions in thriller, Jaguars stun Broncos, Panthers beat Bucs – as it happened

I don’t think there is anything I can add to that absolutely crackers ending. Pittsburgh survive by the skin of their teeth. Mike Tomlin confirms a 19th season without a losing record. Ironman. Goodnight

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‘RIP’: Australian media revels in ‘deeply lamented’ death of Bazball after Ashes woe

The sports sections of Australia’s major mastheads were on Monday largely dedicated to ridiculing pre-series predictions of an England Ashes victory, and announcing the end of the tourists’ now-compromised attacking philosophy.“Bazball is dead”, asserted the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, quoting former Australian opener Simon Katich. The West Australian newspaper fully committed to the theme, mocking up a pronouncement of Bazball’s passing on ye olde parchment, “deeply lamented by Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes, but basically no one else”.However, the triumphal moment in the country’s greatest sporting rivalry was diluted in Monday’s newspapers, as a belated and ultimately hard-earned Ashes victory was pushed from the front pages by the fallout from the Bondi terror attack.In The Sydney Morning Herald, the match didn’t warrant a mention on either the front page or the news section, even though the series arrives at the SCG in less than two weeks

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Wesley Plaisier claims ‘biggest victory’ in stunning upset of Gerwyn Price

By the end, all Gerwyn Price could do was applaud. There was no snarling and no sullenness from the former champion, just a nod of recognition, an admission that sometimes the other guy just plays darts from the gods. And here the other guy was Wesley Plaisier, the world No 92 from the Netherlands, a player of rich potential, but nothing that would ever have suggested he was capable of a shock of this magnitude.The talent has always been there: last year he joined a select group of players to have won a Pro Tour event despite not holding a tour card.After making his way through Q-School, this year has been harder