From Eternity to Jamiroquai: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

A picture


Eternity Out nowMiles Teller and Elizabeth Olsen star, along with Callum Turner, in a quirky metaphysical romantic drama from A24, in which, upon arriving in the afterlife, everyone must decide where, and with whom, they would like to spend eternity.Should Olsen’s character pick the man she settled down with (Teller) or her first love (Turner)?It Was Just an AccidentOut now This Palme d’Or-winning feature from Iranian director Jafar Panahi blends social realism with political commentary, as a man (Ebrahim Azizi) and his pregnant wife (Afsaneh Najmabadi), travelling with their young daughter (Delmaz Najafi), are involved in a minor car crash.Folktales Out now Documentary-makers Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady (Jesus Camp) follow a group of teens as they take a gap year at a traditional folk high school in Arctic Norway, where the emphasis is less on a traditional curriculum and more on dog sledding and survival skills.Five Nights at Freddy’s 2Out now Based on the second video game in the popular series, this sequel sees Josh Hutcherson reprising his role as night guard Mike Schmidt, and Jim Henson’s Creature Shop back on puppet duty, for this horror about animatronic critters possessed from within by unquiet souls.Catherine BrayThe CharlatansO2 Academy Leeds, 6 December; touring to 12 DecemberReleased in October, the Charlatans’ 14th album We Are Love found the indie perennials continuing to push their sound via production help from Dev Hynes.

Songs such as its psych-tinged title track should sit neatly alongside their best work when played live.Michael CraggGeorgia Mancio TrioThe Verdict, Brighton, 6 December; Peterborough Jazz Club, 14 DecemberThis quietly evocative singer has long been a lot more than a standards specialist: she can reinvent Antônio Carlos Jobim classics; skip through fast bebop swingers; and captivate audiences with the storytelling of her originals.She’s accompanied by fine keyboardist Pete Whittaker and drummer Dave Ohm here.John FordhamBarbara Hannigan and Bertrand ChamayouWigmore Hall, London, 6 DecemberThe fearless Canadian soprano joins forces with the ever-adventurous French pianist for 20th- and 21st-century works.Hannigan sings Messiaen’s song cycle Chants de Terre et de Ciel and Chamayou plays Scriabin, including the late, obsessive Vers la Flamme, before they tackle John Zorn’s Jumalatteret, celebrating the goddesses of Sami Shamanism and described by Hannigan as the hardest thing she’s ever sung.

Andrew ClementsJamiroquaiCo-op Live, Manchester, 6 December; touring to 14 DecemberJay Kay and his jazz-funk band arrive in arenas this week,With work under way on a new album there’s a lot for the diehards, while Virtual Insanity and Canned Heat should soothe the glory hunters,MCWes AndersonDesign Museum, London, to 26 JulyThe scene in Wes Anderson’s Grand Budapest Hotel when a villain punches a hole in an Egon Schiele painting is one of the funniest art moments in cinema,This and other Anderson films are layered confections of design and aestheticism,Here he gets a retrospective of his exquisite comic sensibility.

Performing TreesWhitworth Art Gallery, Manchester, to 4 AprilDo trees actually perform? They do in art, according to this exhibition, and have been doing so for centuries, from orange trees in Renaissance paintings to Romantic firs and impressionist poplars.Trees by Cézanne, Carracci, Sutherland and George Shaw feature in this forest of delights from the Whitworth collection.William NicholsonPallant House Gallery, Chichester, to 10 MayThis respected British painter’s life straddled the Victorian and modern ages: he was born in 1872 and lived until 1949.But his most memorable art takes you to the blithely unseeing years of the early 1900s with tender, tranquil, colourful scenes of a world about to be lost to war.Monument to the UnimportantPace Gallery, London, to 14 FebruaryModern art’s shift from grand narratives to everyday objects – Coke cans, flowers in a vase – finds expression here.

Artists featured include Claes Oldenburg, Rachel Whiteread and Sylvie Fleury, in a survey from pop to now.Jonathan JonesRob BrydonRoyal Concert Hall, Glasgow, 7 December; touring to 16 DecemberWe may not be getting Gavin and Stacey this Christmas, but Uncle Bryn is still spreading the seasonal spirit.Alongside his “fabulous band”, Brydon will combine songs, jokes and his incredible impersonations (sadly Steve Coogan won’t be on hand to critique them).Rachel AroestiInto the WoodsBridge theatre, London, to 18 AprilDirector Jordan Fein has a knack for reigniting musicals (see also Fiddler on the Roof).Here he tackles Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine’s entrancing work, which puts a twist on four Grimm tales.

With design from the brilliant Tom Scutt.Miriam GillinsonBeauty and the BeastNorthern Stage, Newcastle upon Tyne, to 3 JanuaryAn all-female creative team helm this year’s panto, directed by Bryony Shanahan and devised by Katie Mitchell and Lucy Kirkwood.Unexpected twists include mischievous fairies, a Thoughtsnatcher machine and a live Insect Orchestra of fleas and flies.MGWee NutcrackerTramway, Glasgow, 12 December to Christmas Eve A trip to see the Nutcracker may be Christmas tradition, but the full ballet can be a lot to sit through for small children waiting for their interval ice cream.Step forward Scottish Ballet’s Wee Nutcracker, adapted for kids age 5+, it’s a smaller-scale version of the story, capped at 45 minutes.

Lyndsey WinshipSign up to Inside SaturdayThe only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine.Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend.after newsletter promotionThe Revenge Club Paramount+, 12 December Based on JD Pennington’s novel The Othello Club, this drama about a group of divorced strangers who decide to get their own back on their former spouses is the kind of high-concept crime caper that post-peak TV does so well.Martin Compston, Meera Syal, Sharon Rooney and Aimee-Ffion Edwards star.The War Between the Land and the SeaBBC One & iPlayer, 7 December, 8.

30pmOne last hurrah for the big Disney+ Doctor Who deal, as this ambitious spin-off chronicling humanity’s battle against ancient species the Sea Devils commences.Russell Tovey is the man with the world on his shoulders; Gugu Mbatha-Raw plays one of the beleaguered creatures.Man vs BabyNetflix, 11 DecemberRowan Atkinson consolidates his Netflix-abetted comeback with this follow-up to his 2022 hit Man vs Bee.Once again, Trevor Bingley is faced with an unexpected colleague on a housesitting job: cue Bean-esque slapstick and humiliation.Susannah Fielding and Ashley Jensen co-star.

Nick Cave’s Veiled WorldSky Arts & Now, 6 December, 9pmTimed to coincide with the Matt Smith-led adaptation of his novel The Death of Bunny Munro, this one-off documentary examines Cave’s unique artistic universe with help from friends and collaborators including Warren Ellis, Bella Freud, Florence Welch and Colin Greenwood.RASkate StoryPS5, Switch 2, PC; out 8 December As if skateboarding wasn’t perilous enough, Skate Story sees you play a brittle rider made of glass making their way through the underworld.The surreal scenario doesn’t skimp on depth: there are more than 70 tricks to master.Terminator 2D: No FatePS4, PS5, Xbox, Switch, PC; out 12 DecemberWhat if 1991’s Terminator 2: Judgment Day had a new video game adaptation appropriate to the decade it came from? Expect side-scrolling arcade action and lavish pixel art, plus new missions alongside reimaginings of the film’s set-pieces.Matthew ReynoldsXO – Fashionably Late Out now New UK girlband XO arrive with their debut “body of work” in the shape of this high-octane EP.

The Charli xcx-assisted Real Friends is an attitude-heavy update of Girl Power, while Silly Boy – complete with earworm whistle riff – and Candy are naggingly catchy.A promising start.Alison Wonderland – Ghost WorldOut nowSince swapping classical – she was a cellist with the Sydney Youth Opera – for dance music, Alexandra Sholler has scored three Top 10 albums in her homeland.Ghost World continues her penchant for mind-melting EDM, specifically on the metallic clank of XTC and Get Started’s sweaty dancefloor yearning.TEED – Always With MeOut nowLondon-born electronic music producer Orlando Higginbottom, FKA Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs, releases this debut album under a new moniker.

Written in LA, chiefly on a single synth, Always With Me harnesses a nostalgic musical and emotional brevity on songs like Desire and My Melody.Melody’s Echo Chamber – Unclouded Out nowThirteen years after her debut, French musician Melody Prochet returns with this fourth album of sweeping psych-pop abstraction.With a title inspired by Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki and a hard-won love for life, songs such as In the Stars feel both dramatic and buoyant.MCMasaka Kids, A Rhythm WithinNetflix, 9 DecemberThis joyful film follows a group of children in a Ugandan orphanage whose dances have gained millions of views over the past five years on social media.We see how virality has transformed their lives.

The Modern Art Notes PodcastArt critic Tyler Green hosts this in-depth series featuring hour-long conversations with artists, historians and curators.Highlights include Antony Gormley on the changing status of sculpture, and Hew Locke on British imperialism.Crash OutThe aptly named American Artist presents this video commission for Somerset House’s online exhibition space, Channel, exploring the tension between free speech and censorship – all via the medium of a fictional streaming persona.Ammar Kalia
cultureSee all
A picture

Barbican revamp to give ‘bewildering’ arts centre a new lease of life

Project will make the famously confusing London landmark easier to navigate and more accessible“Everything leaks,” says Philippa Simpson, the director of buildings and renewal at the Barbican, who is standing outside the venue’s lakeside area and inspecting the tired-looking tiles beneath her feet.Water seeps through the cracks into the building below and serves as a reminder of the job facing Simpson and the team who are overhauling the 43-year-old landmark.The first phase of the project will cost £231m, and Simpson – who did a similar, if less daunting, job for the Young V&A in east London – hopes it will be finished in time for the 50th anniversary in 2032. The overall bill is estimated to be £451m.A mammoth task awaits her

A picture

A minimalist statement or just Pantonedeaf? ‘Cloud dancer’ shade of white named Pantone’s 2026 colour of the year

Hi, Emma! I’m so pumped to find out what colour 2026 is going to be. Fill me in!Brace yourself, Nick. Every year since 1999 Pantone chooses a colour for the year, a representation of the zeitgeist – from how we’re feeling to what we’re wearing, how we’re styling our homes and even our eyebrows. Last year’s was the darker shade of beige “mocha mousse”, the year before that was the soft, warm “peach fuzz”.This year’s pick is even more baffling

A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on Pete Hegseth, ‘our secretary of war crimes’

Late-night hosts tore into Pete Hegseth’s Venezuelan boat blame game, Donald Trump’s cabinet meeting naps and the annual Spotify Wrapped lists.Jimmy Kimmel opened his Wednesday-evening monologue with an acknowledgement of a yearly tradition: the annual Spotify Wrapped list, documenting users’ listening habits for the year.“This Spotify, they really have it figured out,” he said. “They spy on you all year. It’s what they do

A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on the Trump administration: ‘They have better-quality cabinets at Ikea’

Late-night hosts tore into Donald Trump’s five-hour Truth Social posting spree and his inability to stay awake during cabinet meetings.Jimmy Kimmel wasted no time in returning to his favorite target – Donald Trump – on Tuesday evening. “I know I’ve said this before, but for real this time: he went completely off the rails last night,” the host began. “The man who is allegedly running the country banged out an onslaught of posts and reposts in a furious social media blitzkrieg that started at 7.09pm, went nonstop until almost midnight

A picture

Norman conquest coin hoard to go on show in Bath before permanent display

The coins were buried in a valley in the English West Country almost 1,000 years ago at a time of huge political and social turmoil.A millennium on, plans have been announced to bring the Chew Valley Hoard, 2,584 silver coins hidden shortly after the Norman conquest, back to the south-west of England.The feelgood story of how the coins, worth more than £4m, were found by a band of metal detectorists will be told but visitors will also be encouraged to reflect on how the world continues to be gripped by worries about conflict, the actions of the powerful and money.Sam Astill, the chief executive of South West Heritage Trust, which acquired the hoard for the nation last year, said the idea was not just about showing off the coins and telling their history.He said: “There will also be a conversation about turning points, turning points in history or in people’s lives

A picture

Jon Stewart on Trump claiming not to know about his own MRI: ‘That’s not physically possible’

Late-night hosts tore into Donald Trump for his use of an ableist slur and unconvincing attempts to assuage concerns about his cognitive abilities.As the Thanksgiving spirit gave way to the work week, Jon Stewart tore into the president for using an ableist slur to describe the Minnesota governor, Tim Walz. In a Truth Social post over the weekend, Trump called Walz, who ran against him last year as Kamala Harris’s running mate, “seriously retarded”.“On Thanksgiving?! Are you confusing that with Festivus?” the Daily Show host exclaimed on Monday evening.Days later, asked by reporters if he regretted his remarks, Trump doubled down, saying that there was “something seriously wrong” with the Democratic governor