The Traitors to Dry Cleaning: the week in rave reviews

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Claudia Winkleman returns with the regular version of the hit gameshow, while the left-field indie quartet spread their wings.Here’s the pick of the week’s culture, taken from the Guardian’s best-rated reviewsBBC iPlayer; next episode SaturdaySummed up in a sentence Series four of the “civilian” Traitors introduces an audacious new wrinkle to keep its players – and its viewers – on their toes.What our reviewer said “Having grown the series’ following with The Celebrity Traitors, the BBC could easily have rolled out another civilian season using past templates and felt sure of a record-breaking audience.Instead, they’ve upped the ante and made the format even twistier.” Elle HuntRead the full reviewFurther reading New Traitors contestants include detective, crime writer and psychologistBBC iPlayerSummed up in a sentence David Attenborough brings his lifelong sense of wonder to the city’s wildlife, from foxes to peregrine falcons, in this exquisite special.

What our reviewer said “This one human animal has changed the way we see the natural world.Whatever will we do without him?” Chitra RamaswamyRead the full reviewFurther reading ‘Cities need nature to be happy’: David Attenborough seeks out London’s hidden wildlifeITVXSummed up in a sentence Blackmail! Murder! Horny Republicans! This starry bonkbuster is about as good as nonsense television gets.What our reviewer said “This is your reward.For getting through Christmas, for getting through the crisis-laden sorrowfest that was 2025, the gods of television have vouchsafed us eight episodes of the most perfect trash to fill our screens since – well, I don’t even know when.” Lucy ManganRead the full reviewBBC iPlayerSummed up in a sentence The racy espionage blockbuster returns after a decade away, with Tom Hiddleston back as MI6 agent Jonathan Pine.

What our reviewer said “It still floats far above most of the competition.” Jack SealeRead the full reviewFurther reading ‘We’re your dream throuple!’ The Night Manager is back – and it’s even steamierBBC iPlayerSummed up in a sentence This four-part docudrama is a truly intense watch, making you feel as if you’re onboard the doomed ship.What our reviewer said “There’s no denying that it sates our appetite for Titanic-themed content.However, in centring the words and memories of those who lived through the terror of that night, it restores them much-needed agency.” Hannah J DaviesRead the full reviewIn cinemas nowSummed up in a sentence This undeniably entertaining drama sees Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson play a real-life couple who rose to fame with a Neil Diamond tribute act.

What our reviewer said “Its feelgood flavour won’t prepare you for the way the plot repeatedly and savagely twists like an unsafe fairground ride.I actually had my eyes closed and mouth open at certain key points, and was grabbing the seat in front of me with both fists.” Peter BradshawRead the full reviewFurther reading Kate Hudson on taking risks, rejecting compromise – and finding her voice at 46In cinemas nowSummed up in a sentence Over four hours of documentary, cinema-verite demigod Frederick Wiseman takes a gastronomic tour through the minutiae of running a triple-starred Michelin restaurant.What our reviewer said “There is no drama here; no Gordon Ramsay tantrums, no Anton Ego-type food critics keeping everyone on their toes.Just monastic absorption in pure process in a workspace that the Troisgros keep studiously calm, all the better to create.

” Phil HoadRead the full reviewSky Documentaries & NowSummed up in a sentence Marina Zenovich’s documentary profiles the talented, if often obnoxious, actor and comedian,What our reviewer said “Zenovich and her editor, splicing and dicing 50 years of archive material, get across Chase’s abundant talent at its best, particularly his masterly command of the pratfall, and his immaculate comic timing,” Leslie FelperinRead the full reviewFurther reading ‘He has come back from the dead’: Chevy Chase spent eight days in a coma during Covid pandemicTrue StorySummed up in a sentence Jérémie Battaglia’s captivating documentary follows two north African raseteurs battling bulls and systemic racism in southern France,What our reviewer said “Battaglia’s poignant film is more than a tribute to the talents of these extraordinary men: it also lays bare how integration is rarely a two-way process” Phuong LeRead the full reviewReviewed by Patrick GaleSummed up in a sentence A standout debut novel from the acclaimed short story writer,What our reviewer said “Mueenuddin’s writing is always fluent and often very funny.

He brings the smells and tastes of Pakistan to vibrant life; the birds and trees feel as present as the weight of history and the impossible tangles within tangles of corruption and responsibility.”Read the full reviewFurther reading Books to look out for in 2026 – fictionReviewed by Claire AdamSummed up in a sentence South African colonial-era tale of a battle of wills between maid and employer.What our reviewer said “Cape Fever is a cleverly told and ultimately satisfying novel, by an author bold enough to reveal uncomfortable truths.”Read the full reviewReviewed by Farrah JarralSummed up in a sentence The gruesome story of a slave ship.What our reviewer said “Part thriller, part serious nonfiction, The Zorg effectively illuminates one of the darkest chapters in our history.

”Read the full reviewFurther reading Books to look out for in 2026 – nonfictionReviewed by Jonathan LeeSummed up in a sentence Set in Northumberland and Spain, the poet’s debut novel is a tense portrait of two brothers trying to escape their father’s gangland past.What our reviewer said “One of this novel’s many successes is in capturing the terror of illicit attraction – of admitting to yourself that you secretly want something more.”Read the full reviewReviewed by Amit ChaudhuriSummed up in a sentence The first memoir by the Booker-winning novelist and political activist.What our reviewer said “The world described in the first part of the book provides much of the material for The God of Small Things.But even if she had never written her novel they would be utterly absorbing.

”Read the full reviewFurther reading Where to start with: Arundhati RoyOut 9 JanuarySummed up in a sentence The standout act in the sprechgesang wave, the four-piece’s newly expansive sound carries singer Florence Shaw’s distinctive tales of mundane lives spiralling out of control,What our reviewer said “The sense of a band who have outgrown their original remit, outstripped their initial WTF? novelty value, and are shifting confidently into new spaces, is difficult to miss,” Alexis PetridisRead the full reviewOut nowSummed up in a sentence The 80s sax star leads an A-list quartet in an exquisite flow of genre, harmony and improv,What our reviewer said “Riversphere likens the interweaving of rivers to the flows of music-making between genres, individuals and across the blurred lines of composition and improv,” John FordhamRead the full reviewOut nowSummed up in a sentence This six-disc collection to mark the late pianist’s 80th birthday is full of treats, including rare ventures into Chopin and Copland.

What our reviewer said “If ever a pianist’s appearance belied the character of his playing it was Lupu: that the intensely serious, heavily bearded figure who hunched over the keyboard in a way more appropriate to a seance than a recital could produce playing of such velvety tonal beauty was extraordinary.” Andrew ClementsRead the full review
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Ashes review launched by ECB as Stokes gives full backing to under-fire McCullum

Ben Stokes has backed Brendon McCullum’s continuation as head coach despite England’s 4-1 Ashes thrashing in Australia. McCullum, in turn, has accepted the need for improvement but will push back if he is told what to do.“If I’m asked my opinion he’ll be getting my full support and ­backing,” Stokes said after England’s five-wicket defeat at the Sydney Cricket Ground. “I absolutely love working with Baz. He’s a great man and he’s a very, very, very good coach

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Kicking zones and a ban on losing teams: NFL playoff tweaks we’d like to see

The postseason consistently serves up enthralling football. But there are ways to make it even more compellingNo legitimate Super Bowl champion should have a losing record in the regular season. The Panthers, crowned NFC South champions at 8-9, are not an outlier. Since 2010, five teams with losing records have made the postseason. The 2022 Bucs were the first team to make the dance with a losing record since the league instituted a 17-game schedule

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The Timberwolves should not play until ICE violence in Minneapolis is held to account | Lee Escobedo

The SUV sat motionless against a tree on a south Minneapolis street, its engine quiet, angled as if it had simply run out of gas. Except the windshield bore a small shattered star, delicate and sharp, like a snowflake pressed into glass. Cold Minnesota air leaked through the fracture, settling over the still body inside. The car became a sealed room, a thin shell holding death in place, surrounded by the stuffed animals of the woman’s children.In the street, witnesses screamed

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Australia beat England by five wickets on day five of the fifth Ashes Test – as it happened

Time to call stumps. On behalf of the Guardian’s over-by-over team, thanks for your company today and throughout this 2025-26 Ashes series. Over and OUT!Geoff Lemon pays tribute to player of the series Mitchell Starc.It was right that Mitchell Starc should clean up the last two English wickets of this Ashes. Right, too, that Travis Head should mop up a few more runs, but for all of the enjoyment that Head brings with his Jayasuriya-lite batting and his Boon-lite persona, the difference in the series has been the other left-hander

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Talismanic Mitchell Starc adds final flourish to his imperious Ashes series | Geoff Lemon

It was right that Mitchell Starc should clean up the last two English wickets of this Ashes. Right, too, that Travis Head should mop up a few more runs, but for all of the enjoyment that Head brings with his Jayasuriya-lite batting and his Boon-lite persona, the difference in the series has been the other left-hander. The fifth morning of the Sydney Test took Starc to 31 wickets at 19, and crossing 30 is the stuff of great Ashes series. Sixteen other Australians have done it, a list mostly comprised of players who only need be identified by surnames.In the manner of schoolteachers meeting you as an adult, some people are stuck with a memory of Starc as he was at the beginning: a lanky possessor of promise with the risk of being wayward, expensive or injured

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Australia hold on to win fifth Ashes Test and leave England rueing missed chances

There were a couple of wobbles along the way but at 2.30pm on the final day in Sydney, Australia had knocked off a target of 160 to win the fifth Test by five wickets and claim the Ashes by a 4-1 scoreline.Like their tour as a whole, there was a nagging sense of what might have been for England with a few more runs on the board, or better catching and tighter bowling earlier in the contest. But there could be few quibbles from the injured Ben Stokes as he watched the final rites from first slip.This has been a chastening tour for Stokes and his team, the Ashes lost in a record-equalling 11 days and just that two-day shootout victory in Melbourne to show for it