From Mother Mary to Foo Fighters: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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An idiosyncratic thriller sees Anne Hathaway’s pop icon and Michaela Coel’s fashion designer embark on a psychosexual romance, while Dave Grohl and his boys are back with album number 12Mother MaryOut now Anne Hathaway and Michaela Coel play a pop star and a fashion designer embroiled in a psychosexual affair in this A24 drama-slash-thriller from the reliably idiosyncratic director David Lowery.Also starring FKA twigs, Sian Clifford and Hunter Schafer.Rose of NevadaOut now Starring George MacKay and possible future James Bond Callum Turner, this is a sci-fi drama from talented director Mark Jenkin about a boat lost at sea for three decades that mysteriously reappears.Some might suggest it’s advisable to stay away from this clearly uncanny boat, but that would make for a shorter movie.Exit 8Out now Based on the hit video game set in a Japanese metro station passageway, this high-concept horror has its protagonist, The Lost Man (Kazunari Ninomiya) trapped in a seemingly inescapable spatial loop, looking for the anomalies that will help him progress through the eerie environment.

MichaelOut now Seventeen years on from Michael Jackson’s death, his estate-approved biopic finally arrives.Charting his rise from the Jackson 5 to Bad-era superstardom, the film features Jackson’s nephew Jaafar in the lead, with Colman Domingo as domineering father Joe, and Antoine Fuqua on directing duties.Catherine BrayEgo Ella MayManchester, 29 April; touring to 9 May A fusion of neo-soul and contemporary jazz, south Londoner Ego Ella May’s third album Good Intentions gets an airing on this short tour.Keep an ear out for slick tracks such as What You Waiting For.MCGrand Pianola MusicRoyal Northern College of Music, Manchester, 1 May Pianist Tamara Stefanovich joins the BBC Philharmonic and conductor John Storgårds in Stravinsky’s Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments and John Adams’s Grand Pianola Music, inspired by a dream about limousines turning into oversized Steinway pianos.

Flora WillsonCheltenham jazz festivalVarious venues, 29 April to 4 May The 30th anniversary of the ever diverse Cheltenham jazz festival draws a typical raft of established and rising stars.Genre-bending virtuoso violinist Nigel Kennedy (1 May) is an early highlight with Joshua Redman and Emma Rawicz to follow.John FordhamLouis Tomlinson25 April to 3 May; tour continues Birmingham Just before tours by his former bandmates, Louis arrives in UK arenas in support of January’s How Did I Get Here?.With three albums of rock-adjacent pop to lean on now, chances of a One Direction throwback are slim but not impossible.Michael CraggHandpicked: Painting Flowers from 1900 to Today Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge, today to 6 September Flowers are integral to the look and feel of Kettle’s Yard: its founders Jim and Helen Ede incorporated fresh cut flowers into the gallery to create visual counterpoints to the artwork and architecture.

This exhibition features artists who cared about flowers as much as the Edes, from Henri Rousseau and Winnifred Nicholson to Lubaina Himid and Cedric Morris.George HallettJohn Lennon School of Art and Design, Liverpool, to 2 July In the 1970s, thousands of miles from his Cape Town home, South African photographer George Hallett set about documenting black resistance and survival in Thatcher’s Britain.This show features portraits of prominent black artists, musicians, writers and politicians such as Chinua Achebe and Nelson Mandela.Lonnie HolleyEdel Assanti, London, 28 April An “open house” to inaugurate this gallery’s new outpost in St James’s (the show opens properly on 5 June).Lonnie Holley’s new works are filled with silhouetted faces emerging from the gloom, kaleidoscopic visions of ancestral memory from an artist who has spent decades at the forefront of a loose movement of black artists from the US’s south.

Billy Childish Carl Freedman, Margate, Sunday to 14 June Punk rocking rebel Billy Childish continues his adventures in sombre, hazy expressionism with a show of new works inspired by a family road trip through the Californian desert.The paintings deal with themes of universality and spiritualism, all with his usual dizzying, dark, intense approach to figuration.Eddy FrankelFatiha El-Ghorri25 April to 7 June; tour starts Cardiff As both a twice-divorced EastEnder and a hijab-wearing Muslim, Fatiha El-Ghorri is a comedian who complicates stereotypes.This also happens to be the theme of her first standup tour, which follows a string of TV appearances including a recurring role in Mr Bigstuff.Rachel AroestiLet’s Dance International FrontiersVarious venues, Leicester, 29 April to 9 May This annual festival of dance from the African and African-Caribbean diaspora is a chance to see artists who wouldn’t otherwise perform in the UK.

Highlights include the Martinique Compagnie Kamélionite performing in Leicester Cathedral; and a platform for new Black British dance.Lyndsey WinshipAvenue QShaftesbury theatre, London, to 29 AugustThe very silly and saucy puppet show returns to the West End to mark its 20th anniversary.With lyrics and music from Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx – think Sesame Street, the Adult Years.Miriam GillinsonTwelfth NightTheatre Clwyd, to 16 MayDirector Juliette Manon gives Shakespeare’s comedy a vibrant new twist, injecting a party atmosphere into this tale of two shipwrecked twins – drawn into a world of blurred genders, hidden identity and deep yearning.MGMan on FireNetflix, 30 April AJ Quinnell’s 1980 thriller has already been made into a movie twice; now Wonder Man star Yahya Abdul-Mateen II follows in the footsteps of Scott Glenn and Denzel Washington to play former special forces mercenary John Creasy, a man in the grip of PTSD and dead set on revenge.

The CageBBC One & iPlayer, 26 April, 9pm Casinos and heists may be ridiculously overrepresented on screen, but the quality personnel behind this Liverpool-set drama about the latter at the former hints it will transcend tired cliches.Tony Schumacher (The Responder) writes; Sheridan Smith and This Is England’s Michael Socha star as two colleagues on the rob.Widow’s BayApple TV, 29 April Despite Hollywood’s struggles, horror has remained remarkably resilient at the box office; this year TV is getting in on the act.Following Netflix’s hair-raising Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen comes this camply alarming drama fronted by Matthew Rhys as the mayor of a cursed New England town.PrisonerSky Atlantic & Now, 30 April, 9pm A prison transport officer is chaperoning a contract killer across the UK when their vehicle is subject to a deadly attack: now the pair must join forces to survive in this new nail-biter from Bridge of Spies screenwriter Matt Charman.

Big Boys favourite Izuka Hoyle and The Serpent’s Tahar Rahim lead the cast,RAOutboundPC, Xbox, Switch/2, PS5; out now A pleasing-looking game about driving out to picturesque locations and living off-grid in a tiny house that you build from foraged materials on your campervan’s roof,Eco-fantasy meets survival game,SarosPlayStation 5; out 30 April On a threatening planet bathed in the half-light of an eerie eclipse, you are trying to find out what happened to a lost colony,Quasi-masochistic gamers will already have this on their radar: it’s the sequel to pitiless sci-fi shooter Returnal.

Keza MacDonaldWhite Denim – 13Out now Celebrating 20 years, indie-rock rabble White Denim are keen to keep listeners on their toes on this follow-up to 2024’s 12.This 13th album (titles are clearly not their strong point) zips from recent single Ruby’s country-tinged glam stomp to (God Created) Lock and Key’s early Beck-isms.Noah Kahan – The Great DivideOut now With his breakthrough third album, 2022’s Stick Season, still bouncing around the charts on both sides of the Atlantic, US singer-songwriter Noah Kahan re-emerged at the start of the year with the knotty, guilt-racked single The Great Divide.It forms the bleeding heart of this new, Aaron Dessner-produced album.Foo Fighters – Your Favorite ToyOut now After a tricky few years marked by shifting lineups and personal dramas, Dave Grohl and his band of merry men return with this ferocious 12th album.

Louder and more energetic than their recent output, songs such as Of All People and Asking for a Friend are reminiscent of their late-90s heyday,Kehlani – KehlaniOut now Having released one of the best R&B singles in recent years with the Grammy-winning Folded, Kehlani follows it up with this fifth album,Folded is joined by the soul throwback of Out the Window, while Missy Elliott assists on the playful Back and Forth,MCMubi PodcastPodcast The cinephile streaming service launches the 11th season of its podcast, which highlights the impact of movie music,Guests include director Gurinder Chadha on bhangra in Bend It Like Beckham and Studio Ghibli co-founder Toshio Suzuki.

Art UKartuk.org Boasting 1m digitised artworks from 3,500 institutions, the Art UK website is a fascinating repository of our national visual culture.A particular highlight is a detailed, interactive archive of street art and murals.Last Dance Floor in ChernobylBBC World Service, 25 April, 12.06pm Focusing on the 1986 wedding of Ukrainians Iryna and Serhiy, who had to evacuate their reception on the eve of the Chernobyl disaster, this absorbing documentary traces Soviet club culture pre- and post-nuclear fallout.

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Oil hits highest level since US-Iran ceasefire began, as conflict hurts Gulf crude production – as it happened

The oil price has hit its highest level since the US and Iran agreed a ceasefire more than two weeks ago.Brent crude traded as high as $107.48 a barrel this morning, its highest level since 7 April, the day when the US and Iran agreed to a conditional ceasefire.That deal included a temporary reopening of the strait of Hormuz, after Donald Trump had threatened Iran with widespread destruction.But with the strait still largely blockaged, and oil production in the region having more than halved since the war began (see earlier post), anxiety over the conflict is rising again today

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When her ‘soul cat’ died, she was bereft. Now she designs memorial jewelry to help others with pet loss

A layoff and a leap of faith convinced Katie Teixeira she had what it takes to run her own businessIn 2010, Katie Teixeira adopted a kitten found all alone in an abandoned house. The kitten – so tiny she fit in the palm of Teixeira’s hand – needed to be bottle-fed every few hours. For weeks, Teixeira set her alarm for middle-of-the-night feedings and drove home on her lunch break to care for the kitten she named Milo. As the cat grew, so did the connection between them.“We just bonded,” Teixeira says

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‘Look, no hands’: China chases the driverless dream at Beijing car show

At the world’s biggest car fair, which opened in Beijing on Friday, there were hundreds of manufacturers, more than 1,000 vehicles, hundreds of thousands of enthusiasts – and hardly anyone behind a wheel.China’s car companies have cornered the domestic electric vehicle market, and are increasingly visible on the global stage. Now they are turning their attention to what they are betting is the future of mobility: autonomous driving.At the Beijing Auto Fair, a huge industry event that covers 380,000 square metres on the outskirts of the capital, the country’s carmakers showed off a range of intelligent driving technologies.In China’s cut-throat domestic market, nearly every big carmaker is investing heavily in the software and computing power needed to make “hands-free” driving a reality as they compete to offer additional perks and find new ways to generate revenue

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What is a passkey, how does it work and why is it better than a password?

The UK’s National Cyber Security Centre has called time on the password – from now on, you should use a passkey.The NCSC said this week it would no longer recommend using passwords where passkeys were available. They should be consumers’ first choice of login across all digital services because passwords were not secure enough to stand up to modern cyber threats.Security officials describe a passkey as a “digital stamp” that allows you to sign in to apps and websites and is stored on your device.It is a password-free form of login

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Cricket’s April wasteland: Cook and Pietersen row like barbecue dads in the battle for Bethell | Barney Ronay

April is the cruellest month,Breeding likes on the feed (nets with Virat).Mixing Mumbai with Derbyshire.A stirring of Billy Root between the rain.The Abu Dhabi T10 kept us warm.Summer surprised us, coming over the live stream withan interminable anecdote about sandwiches

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59,000 runners, 93,024 energy gels and £100m for charity: the London Marathon is booming

The prodigious growth of running clubs, fuelled by young women, has seen the popularity of the event sky-rocketThere is always magic in the air on a London Marathon morning. But this year the event promises to dazzle and soar more than ever. A world-record 59,000 people will take part in Sunday’s race, raising close to £100m for charity while swallowing 93,024 Lucozade gels from Greenwich to the Mall. There are also whispers of a men’s world record attempt. But the biggest noise of all is coming from those hailing a new golden era of running