From Avatar to Amadeus: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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Avatar: Fire and AshOut now James Cameron comes down with a case of the Christmas blues, so to speak, as the director’s record-breaking franchise epic returns once more to planet Pandora for more internecine strife and respecting of the splendour of the natural world, rendered in dazzling motion-capture glory,Silent Night, Deadly NightOut now Actor Rohan Campbell graduates from Michael Myers wannabe in the fairly dire Halloween Ends, to main bogeyman Billy Chapman in the latest instalment of the Silent Night, Deadly Night franchise (second remake, seventh film overall, fact fans),Per franchise lore, he witnessed his parents’ murder-by-Santa aged five, and the rest is grisly history,Fackham HallOut now Jimmy Carr turns his hand to screenwriting with this parody of Downton Abbey-type films,Given the actual Downton Abbey films already play as a parody of Downtown Abbey-type films, there may not be much to add, but a cast including Thomasin McKenzie, Katherine Waterston, Damian Lewis and Anna Maxwell Martin are here to give it their best shot.

Silent Sherlock: Three Classic CasesOut now Which actor has played Sherlock Holmes the most times on the big screen? It’s great pub trivia, and the answer is Eille Norwood, who depicted the great detective in 45 two-reelers,Watch three of them – A Scandal in Bohemia, The Golden Pince-Nez, The Final Problem – in this restored collection,Catherine BrayThe FutureheadsSunderland, 20 December; London, 22 December What better way to get into the festive spirit than spending a couple of nights with Sunderland pop-punkers the Futureheads,It’s perfect timing really, as they’ve just released Christmas, a 10-track collection of originals and festive favourites, including an a cappella version of Wonderful Christmastime,Michael CraggSolomon’s KnotWigmore Hall, London, 22 December Each December British concert halls seem to be given over earlier and earlier to celebrating Christmas.

Only the Wigmore Hall seems immune to this tendency, and this year it closes for just three days over the holidays.The highlight leading up to the break is the latest appearance by the hall’s resident ensemble; the vocalists of Solomon’s Knot give a distinctly unseasonal performance of Handel’s oratorio, Israel in Egypt.Andrew ClementsNick Costley-WhiteVortex Jazz Club, London, 21 December The prize-winning UK guitarist hosts a regular jam at the Vortex, and his grasp of the jazz tradition and deep affection for Latin-American music make him an ideally openminded host.Exciting drummer Jas Kayser and a variety of cutting-edge young horn players help him stir the pot.John FordhamMiki Berenyi TrioGlasgow, 20 December; Newcastle upon Tyne, 21 DecemberSince releasing debut album, Tripla, in April, former Lush singer-guitarist Miki Berenyi has spent much of the year on tour.

Alongside bassist Oliver Cherer and guitarist KJ “Moose” McKillop, she rounds things off with two more chances to gaze at your shoes to their brand of dream pop.MCSelves and Stand-insModern One, Edinburgh, to 25 January Portraits are pictures of individuals.But what is an individual, or a “self”? Modern artists since Cézanne have asked that philosophical question and if you need your brain woken up amid the seasonal fun, here are some provocative and strange meditations by Gillian Wearing, Robert Mapplethorpe, Andy Warhol and more.Showtime!Charles Dickens Museum, London, to 18 JanuaryThere isn’t anywhere more Christmassy than the home of Charles Dickens, where you can see how the creator of Scrooge celebrated life.This exhibition surveys the timeless appetite for dramatising his novels, from 1837 when his characters first hit the stage to Oliver! and, of course, the Muppets Christmas Carol.

Powder and PresenceHolburne Museum, Bath, to 4 May Fairytale frills and romantic fantasy abound in this look at the delicate art of the 18th-century pastel portrait.Working in pastels gave portraits an intimacy that suited the hyper-civilised, yet also passionate, age of the Enlightenment and French Revolution.Anna Tonelli, William Hoare and others capture sensual looks.Sufi Life and ArtBritish Museum, London, to 26 July The mystic traditions of Sufi culture have generated some of the Islamic world’s most ecstatic art and music.This exhibition ranges from a portrait of a dervish with a trumpet and begging bowl to paintings of saints and ascetics, a reed flute and modern abstract art with a Sufi twist.

Jonathan JonesA Christmas CarolLeeds Playhouse, to 17 January Director Amy Leach’s new version of Dickens’s classic is set in the wool industry and promises to be a joyful, community-focused affair.Reece Dinsdale stars as Scrooge alongside a diverse cast of actor-musicians, young dancers and even a few tap-dancing baubles.Miriam GillinsonChristmas DayAlmeida theatre, London, to 8 January Sam Grabiner’s breakthrough play was set entirely in a men’s public toilet.His latest show – festive fare with bite – unfolds in an abandoned building where a Jewish family gathers for Christmas Day.The cast includes Nigel Lindsay and Bel Powley.

MGA Night With the StarsMoth Club, London, 20 December Their moron-podcaster sketches have made comedians Paddy Young and Ed Night two of the funniest people on Instagram.Now experience their deadpan idiocy in the flesh with this Christmas edition of their live extravaganza, featuring fellow standup Dan Tiernan and other guests.Rachel AroestiThe Nutcracker Leeds Grand theatre, to 4 January David Nixon stepped down as artistic director of Northern Ballet in 2021 – succeeded by former Royal Ballet dancer Federico Bonelli – but the company still has many of his ballets in the rep, including this classic Christmassy Nutcracker with all the favourite festive ingredients.Lyndsey WinshipThe LowdownDisney+, Boxing Day This riotous noir from Reservation Dogs co-creator Sterlin Harjo has gone down a storm in the US thanks to Ethan Hawke’s cracking central performance as a scrappy journalist – or, in his words, “truthstorian” – intent on rooting out corruption in his home town of Tulsa, Oklahoma.AmadeusNow & Sky Atlantic, 21 December, 9pmThe rivalry between Mozart and Salieri may be 300-year-old news, but Joe Barton (Black Doves, Giri/Haji) has transformed it into a strikingly fresh drama.

Will Sharpe is the titular child prodigy turned musical genius whose arrival in Vienna rocks the elder composer’s world.Paul Bettany co-stars as his nemesis.Finding Father ChristmasChannel 4, Christmas Eve, 7.30pm Stephen Fry, Greg Davies, Asim Chaudhry and James Buckley are among this festive feature-length comedy-drama’s impressive cast.But they will all pale in comparison to the luminous Bafta-winner Lenny Rush (Am I Being Unreasonable?) who stars as a 16-year-old with an enduring faith in Santa.

StuffediPlayer & BBC One, Christmas Eve, 9pm Guz Khan and his Man Like Mobeen co-creator Andy Milligan trade the West Midlands for Lapland in this one-off Christmas comedy about a family whose bonus-funded yuletide trip descends into complete chaos.Morgana Robinson and Sue Johnston co-star.RAAll Hands on Deck PC, Switch 1/2; out now As there’s nothing new out in December, it’s time to turn to the best co-op and multiplayer games of 2025 to play with whoever’s next to you on the couch over the holidays.This cute and colourful puzzle game stars two disembodied hands …Lego Voyagers All platforms; out now … and this is an unexpectedly touching two-player story about two anthropomorphised blocks that can be completed in a lazy afternoon.A game about building things with a lovely undertone about building relationships, a poignant theme over Christmas for most families.

Keza MacDonaldThis Is Lorelei – Holo Boy Out now Nate Amos of alt-pop weirdos Water from Your Eyes returns to his solo moniker for an album that sits somewhere between ramshackle retrospective and reinvention.Featuring re-recorded versions of his back catalogue, highlights include the two-minute jangle Name the Band.Nas and DJ Premier – Light-Years Out now Having originally mooted a collaboration in 2006, Nas and longtime producer DJ Premier finally make good on their promise.Light-Years is also the final instalment in the Mass Appeal label’s Legend Has It … series of new albums by hip-hop legends.Jade – That’s Showbiz Baby! The Encore Out now Three months after its original release, Jade’s debut solo album gets a refresh, complete with seven new songs.

There’s also room for her recent cover of Madonna’s Frozen, which blossoms from electronic subtlety into a big 90s rave-up.Kylie Minogue – Kylie Christmas (Fully Wrapped) Out now Celebrating the 10-year anniversary of her festive opus, Kylie both gives and takes away.Streamlined to showcase the original’s best bits – there’s no space for that album’s James Corden duet, thank goodness – she also chucks in four new songs, including ludicrous single, Xmas.MCNo TagsPodcast Culture writers Chal Ravens and Tom Lea’s audio series and Substack explore developments in underground music, from the legacy of hardcore rave to the 90s trends experiencing a resurgence.How to Fix Your Attention Span (Before It’s Too Late)YouTube Writer Daniel Pink’s video on how to stay focused may have a slight lecturing tone but the insights are genuinely useful, including setting a baseline for your attention span and creating “focus rituals”.

The Origin of Famous GiftsBBC World Service, Monday to Boxing Day, 8,50am To mark the holiday season of gift-giving, this five-part series examines the origins of the gifts most likely found in every family’s attic,The first episode recounts the surprisingly recent invention of Jenga,Ammar Kalia
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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