From The Magic Faraway Tree to 5 Seconds of Summer: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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Enid Blyton’s classic kids’ fantasy novel gets the big-screen treatment, while the Aussie boyband hit the UK’s arenasThe Magic Faraway TreeOut now A family relocate to the countryside where they find a magic tree that transports them to a fantasy realm in this family adventure.Simon Farnaby (Paddington 2) adapts the Enid Blyton series for the big screen, with Andrew Garfield and Claire Foy starring as Mr and Mrs Thompson.They Will Kill YouOut now This latest eat-the-rich horror, directed by Kirill Sokolov, pits plucky ex-con Asia (Zazie Beetz) as a woman who answers a bad-faith “help wanted” ad against the inhabitants of a luxurious but demonic New York apartment complex that demands regular human sacrifices from its cult of devotees.SplitsvilleOut now Billed as an unromantic comedy about four people navigating the opportunities and pitfalls of ethical non-monogamy, this modern farce follows two couples as they make up and break up in different combinations.With Dakota Johnson, Adria Arjona, Kyle Marvin (who also co-wrote the script) and Michael Angelo Covino (who also directed and co-wrote).

Orwell: 2+2 = 5Out now Raoul Peck directs an award-winning documentary about George Orwell, the profound influence of whose novels and essays endures as unfortunate parallels between present-day political strategies and his work evolve,Damian Lewis narrates,Catherine Bray5 Seconds of SummerGlasgow, 30 March; Birmingham, 31 March; London, 2 April; tour continues to 5 April The proud creators of six albums varying from 1D-aping pop-rock to darker-hued dance experiments, Australian boyband 5SOS have surpassed their own expectations when it comes to career longevity,These arena shows should distil their time into a fun 90 minutes,Michael CraggManchester punk festivalVarious venues, 3 to 5 April With more than 140 bands playing across seven venues, there should be something for every punk fan at this year’s celebration of all things loud and sweaty.

Headliners include hardcore noise merchants Fucked Up and San Francisco punks Dead to Me.MCThe Bad PlusBarbican Hall, London, 30 March Pianist Keith Jarrett’s Standards Trio have long been celebrated as one of the greats – but his lesser-known 1970s American Quartet were close behind.Saxophonist Chris Potter and pianist Craig Taborn celebrate that group’s memorable music.John FordhamMartha Argerich & Dong Hyek LimRoyal Festival Hall, London, 2 April It’s hard to believe one of the world’s greatest pianists turns 85 this year.Still touring internationally, the Argentinian Argerich is joined for her latest UK appearance by her Korean sometime protege for duets and two-piano works by Schubert, Mozart and Rachmaninov.

Flora WillsonKonrad MägiDulwich Picture Gallery, London, to 12 July The cold, bright skies of northern and Baltic Europe are pixelated into shards of strong colour by this Estonian modernist, who was a contemporary of Munch and Matisse,Mägi draws on pointillist dots and expressionist colour and is attracted to intense, brooding subjects, from eerie portraits to wild rural vistas,Joan EardleyModern Two, Edinburgh, to 28 June The gritty, romantic painter who depicted both tough city streets and windswept landscapes in post-second world war Scotland gets a closer look,Eardley is a strong and admirable artist whose eye for beauty and sadness enabled her to see Scottish life and scenery with great conviction and truth,No glamour, just honesty.

Yasmine RobinsonCCA Derry, to 6 June This abstract painter who works in Belfast has a fierce, impassioned sense of colour that makes me think of both the German expressionist Franz Marc and the romantic English colourist Howard Hodgkin.Good stuff in other words.Big wild blobs of red, yellow and blue collide like thunderclouds of emotion.Dia Al-AzzawiRichard Saltoun Gallery, London, to 9 May This British-Iraqi artist has lived in London since 1976 yet this is only his second show there.Originally trained as an archaeologist and curator, he became a painter with a cool, elegant semi-abstract style influenced by Matisse and Picasso, who draws on the Arabian Nights and classic love poetry.

Jonathan JonesCopenhagenHampstead theatre, London, to 2 MayMichael Frayn’s intricately woven play is set during the height of the second world war, and explores a mystifying real-life meeting between German physicist Werner Heisenberg and his former mentor, the Danish scientist Niels Bohr,From director Michael Longhurst and starring Alex Kingston and Richard Schiff,Miriam GillinsonPhoenix Dance Company: InterplayLeeds Playhouse, 31 March to 2 April A quadruple bill from the Leeds contemporary dance company,Highlights include Suite Release, which harks back to 90s hip-hop and the simple joy of dancing with friends, and Why Are People Clapping? a clever, playful piece based on Steve Reich’s Clapping Music,Lyndsey WinshipTom DavisDorking Halls, 28 March; tour continues to 8 November Over the past decade, Davis has provided a sidesplitting stream of loud and ludicrous characters, all while having countless deep and meaningfuls with Romesh Ranganathan on their podcast Wolf & Owl.

His standup lands somewhere in between, as the 46-year-old dissects his psyche with goofy-geezer energy.Rachel AroestiPrivate LivesRoyal Exchange, Manchester, to 2 MayDirector Blanche McIntyre – whose productions always have such clarity and depth – revives Noël Coward’s gloriously vitriolic play about a divorced couple honeymooning in the same hotel.A sparkling cast includes Jill Halfpenny.MGBabiesBBC One/iPlayer, 30 March, 9pm Writer-director Stefan Golaszewski (Him & Her, Marriage) brings his distinctive – and sometimes divisive – brand of social realism to this incredibly moving drama about miscarriage and toxic masculinity.Paapa Essiedu and Siobhán Cullen play a couple struggling with the loss of a baby.

Your Friends & NeighborsApple TV, 3 April Jon Hamm returns as Coop, the man keeping up appearances in his monied suburban enclave by stealing from his wealthier pals, in this arch comedy-drama.Last season saw our antihero almost jailed for murder – this time there’s another threat: a smarmy new neighbour (James Marsden) who may have cottoned on to his grift.XO, KittyNetflix, 2 April As the creator of The Summer I Turned Pretty – a teen drama that hit a nerve with millennial audiences – Jenny Han was behind one of last year’s most talked-about TV finales.Now she’s back with season three of her other YA romance, about a Korean-American student who gets a culture shock when she moves to Seoul.The Young OffendersBBC One/iPlayer, 3 April, 9.

30pm An impressive fifth series for this rambunctious Irish comedy about chaos-magnet pals Jock and Conor,Having spent the previous instalment banged up in separate prisons – one in Colombia, one in Cork – the pair are now reunited in their home town, but trouble won’t be far away,RASuper Mario Bros,WonderOut now; Switch 2 One of the best 2D Mario games, and certainly the weirdest, with its elephant transformations and trippy mid-level breakdowns, has been updated for Nintendo’s new console,It’s got a bunch of new multiplayer features that are especially good for families.

HozyOut Monday; PCClean, renovate and decorate the long-neglected houses of your home town in this novel combination of the award-winning puzzle game Unpacking, surprising mega-hit PowerWash Simulator and the house-building bit from The Sims.The diorama art style and vibey lighting promise a soothing experience.Keza MacDonaldRaye – This Music May Contain HopeOut now Five years after freeing herself from her previous label, the now independent Raye is the proud owner of seven Brit awards, a Grammy and two chart-topping singles.One of those is the retro-soul stomper Where Is My Husband!, which appears on this second album, alongside tear-stained ballad Nightingale Lane.Charlie Puth – Whatever’s Clever! Out now US singer-songwriter Puth’s loved-up fourth album wraps featherlight production around sweet songs such as Home, featuring Japanese superstar Hikaru Utada.

Elsewhere, Kenny G adds sax appeal to the gloriously OTT Cry, while other guests include Ravyn Lenae and Jeff Goldblum.Robyn – SexistentialOut now Despite an eight-year gap between albums, Robyn’s place in the pop canon has only been further cemented via recent tributes from the likes of Charli xcx and Harry Styles.Sexistential adds to her legacy via playful hook-up bops (the title track) and, on Blow My Mind, emotional odes to her young son.Snail Mail – RicochetOut now Since the release of Lindsey Jordan’s second album as Snail Mail in 2021, the Maryland native has had vocal surgery and made her acting debut in surreal cult classic I Saw the TV Glow.These ups and downs of adult life are channelled into Ricochet’s 90s alt-rock, specifically the widescreen Dead End.

MCThe OverturnPodcast Following the families fighting for loved ones who they feel have been victims of miscarriages of justice, this moving series highlights the worrying fractures in the justice system and the often lonely journey to resolution.History of Simple ThingsYouTube A YouTube counterpart to 00s US cable stalwart How It’s Made, this channel explores the engrossing production process behind everyday items such as oregano and almond milk, as well as the etymology of terms such as restroom.The SaltmakersBBC World Service, 2 April, 9.32am Chhavi Sachdev’s investigation into the nomadic lives of the Gujarati Agariya tribes is a fascinating example of how the climate crisis is affecting an ancient way of life and destabilising a vital and traditional salt production process.Ammar Kalia
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Aperitivo or dinner? Portuguese whites are always right

Portuguese wines have been making steady advances on British drinkers in recent years, and for good reason. The country is home to many delightful indigenous grapes (bom dia baga, encantado encruzado), as well as the sort of varied maritime, mountainous terrain that encourages personality. Its winemakers tend to be forward-thinking and climate-conscious, too, and there are lots of bottles of interest at the “midweek” price point – that is, £8-£13. Case in point: the “yellow tram wine”, AKA Porta 6 Lisboa, is now a ubiquitous presence on our high streets.The Guardian’s journalism is independent

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From basil to pistachio and peas – in praise of pesto, whichever way you make it

It was not without satisfaction that I found my 14-year-old son making pesto the other week – for the first 13 years of his life he referred to it as either “pesto-the-bogey-man”, or “gross”. To avoid interfering and sabotaging the moment, I didn’t look too closely, so I didn’t clock the shallow bowl and immersion blender combination. I did hear the noise – a blunt churn – as the blade hit the leaves and nuts. Acting more like a leaf blower than cutter, it sent green and white oily fragments up the cupboards and over pretty much every pot, utensil and tool nearby. Impressively unfazed, he managed to scrape a good proportion of the elements into the food processor and make an extremely tasty pesto, which was mixed with linguine, green beans and potatoes

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Anything but eggs – the best chocolate for Easter

If you like chocolate and nut butter, Radek’s Chocolate is doing wonderful things with both, and its dairy free Silky Almond Chocolate Rabbit is magically creamy. Looking more like subservient mice than bunnies, NearyNógs’ dark chocolate bunnies, stuffed with salted caramel, were my favourite. A superb, successful marriage of very good Ecuadorian chocolate and caramel: worthy of a royal telegram.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link

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Four knockout bakes and tips from the master: Edd Kimber’s recipes for cooking with chocolate

From a white chocolate cheesecake tart and flourless chocolate cake to double chocolate olive oil and marbled matcha cookies, explore chocolate’s endless versatilityChocolate is a truly magical ingredient. Not only is it a powerhouse of flavour, it also pairs beautifully with other ingredients to make something incredible. Chocolate isn’t one note, mind; from the heady richness of an intense dark chocolate to the nostalgic creaminess of milk chocolate and the often maligned simplicity of white chocolate, it can be the star of the show or simply the supporting act. Chocolate can do it all.This is my go-to dinner party dessert

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Sauces, spreads, sprinkles – and cocktail in a can: whose fridge is this?

Amba sauce “I’m very jar orientated; a lot of my cooking is about combining big flavours. I’m also a sucker for a sour ingredient, and this Iraqi pickled mango condiment is really sour – more so than tamarind. If I’m garnishing a dish with tahini, then I’ll use amba to cut through the richness, otherwise I’ll use it in lieu of citrus.”Stem ginger in syrup “My grandpa always gave me this when I was a kid, and I thought it was disgusting. However, now it’s essential; I often make a (chopped) stem ginger and spring onion salsa – it’s sweet and spicy

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Rachel Roddy’s recipe for potato, aubergine and herb tortino alla fiorentina

The sky is the same shade as old Tupperware, our tortoise appears to have gone back into hibernation, the flat upstairs has builders in, but the kitchen smells gorgeous, thanks to this week’s recipe. It is one of the variations suggested by Anna Gosetti Della Salda for her aubergine and egg tortino alla fiorentina in the Tuscany chapter of Le Ricette Regionali Italiane, an indispensable book that I would save from a fire. The addition of potato to the aubergine makes it an even more substantial, velvet-like and better-tasting dish, I think: a layered vegetable bake crossed with a frittata that fancies itself as having a touch of baked eggs (although don’t expect any puffing up).Instead of the aubergine, you could use artichoke hearts (trimmed and cut into slim wedges), courgettes or cardoon, and, if you fancy, you could also add a crumbled sausage or a handful of diced pancetta. Whatever you use, however, a fundamental stage in terms of both flavour and texture is the initial cooking of the vegetables: frying the potatoes, then covering the pan so they fry-steam into tenderness; the aubergine by simply frying