From The Bride! to Harry Styles: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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Maggie Gyllenhaal gives us a new take on The Bride of Frankenstein, and the stadium-conquering pop prince is back with a new albumThe Bride!Out now Maggie Gyllenhaal directs this Chicago-set gothic romance starring Jessie Buckley and Christian Bale.Per James Whale’s 1935 classic Bride of Frankenstein, on which it is loosely based, a lonely monster wants a mate and taps up a scientist, Dr Euphronious (Annette Bening), to create her.Peaky Blinders: The Immortal ManOut now As The Rachel was to women who watched Friends in the 90s, so the Peaky Blinders mop chop was to male fans.Will the return of the Birmingham gang drama in feature film form prompt another wave of ill-advised dos? Only time will tell.Just remember, Cillian Murphy looking amazing with that haircut doesn’t mean it’s a good idea for absolutely everyone.

HoppersOut now More freaky science (see The Bride! above), this time for the family crowd.The latest animation from Disney-Pixar sees humans able to “hop” into sophisticated robot animal bodies in order to walk and talk and sing with the animals.A long-overdue animal revolution against humankind proves to be the unintended consequence of the tech.Sound of FallingOut now For her second film, German director Mascha Schilinski constructs a historical epic taking place across decades and following four different generations of women connected with the same farmhouse, as their lives unfold in war-torn 20th-century Europe and beyond into the 2020s.Winner of the Jury prize at Cannes last year.

Catherine BrayKesha11 to 21 March; tour starts Glasgow The Yippee-Ki-Yay hitmaker brings her frenetic Tits Out tour to the UK in support of last summer’s Period album, which marked a return to joyful pop, undercut with a heavy dose of chaos, so expect a party atmosphere and wall-to-wall bangers.Michael CraggC2C: Country to Country festivalLondon, Glasgow and Belfast, 13 to 15 March Europe’s biggest country fest returns, headlined by Zach Top, Keith Urban and Country Hall of Famers Brooks & Dunn.Split across three cities over three days, the rest of the lineup includes Alana Springsteen, Canadian singer-songwriter Noeline Hofmann and America’s Got Talent alum Drake Milligan.MCThe Philharmonia and Marin AlsopThe Marlow, Canterbury, 11 March; Royal Festival Hall, London, 12 March; Bridgewater Hall, Manchester, 13 March Alisa Weilerstein is the soloist in the UK premiere of the Cello Concerto written for her by Grammy-winning Mexican composer Gabriela Ortiz, followed by Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade.On the podium: principal guest conductor Marin Alsop.

A riot of spring colour – whatever the weather.Flora WillsonQOW TrioWakefield Jazz, 13 March Over the 15 years since his UK arrival, the powerful Irish saxophonist Riley Stone-Lonergan has stretched the freethinking small-group methods of innovators Sonny Rollins and Ornette Coleman.The QOW Trio, with British free bop drummer Spike Wells and bassist Eddie Myer, make ideal partners.John FordhamDavid HockneySerpentine North, London, 12 March to 23 August If you’d said a few years ago that veteran painter Hockney would have a show at the deeply fashionable Serpentine, it would have sounded absurd.But the infectious joy of Hockney’s art, equally at home on canvas or an iPad, helped us through the Covid years and still makes him urgent.

Stubbs: Portrait of a HorseNational Gallery, London, 12 March to 31 May There is a surreal intensity and existential mystery to the way George Stubbs painted horses.They stand in wise and sensitive silence with a jockey in the saddle or pulling a carriage, and appear more alive than their human oppressors.Here, a horse called Scrub is portrayed alone in freedom.Making WavesYork Art Gallery, to 30 August If Hockney’s colours enchant, so do the fierce sharp hues of Japanese woodblock prints.This exhibition takes a delighted look at an art form that never tires, and always appears modern.

From inspiring Van Gogh to influencing manga, the 18th- and 19th-century masters here are brilliantly modern psychedelic all-stars.John PiperWiltshire Museum, Devizes, 7 March to 6 June This modern Romantic artist found his highly popular niche painting ruins and venerable buildings in the British landscape.During the second world war that passion for the picturesque became tragic and moving as he recorded the still-smoking and glowing remains of bombed churches.Here are his visions of the south-west.Jonathan JonesGentleman JackLeeds Grand theatre, 7 to 14 March, touring to 5 SeptemberThe story of Yorkshire landowner, secret diarist and lesbian icon Anne Lister was made famous by the TV series.

Now it’s being retold by Northern Ballet, in a premiere by choreographer Annabelle Lopez Ochoa.It looks at Anne’s story through the prism of the two women she loved most.Lyndsey WinshipThe Holy RosenbergsMenier Chocolate Factory, London, to 2 May Ryan Craig’s pertinent play starred Henry Goodman – all heart and heat – when it premiered at the National in 2011.Now Nicholas Woodeson leads a strong cast in director Lindsay Posner’s revival, which sees a Jewish family in painful conflict with their local community.Miriam GillinsonLivingSheffield Playhouse, to 4 April Elizabeth Newman’s first season as artistic director includes local playwright Leo Butler’s state-of-the-nation play, spanning 55 years in the life of a couple living in Sheffield.

As the world transforms around them, will Kathy and Brian keep their home together through decades of profound change? MGHarry Enfield8 March to 30 November; tour starts York It’s been four decades since Enfield’s knack for zeitgeisty characters – from Stavros to Kevin the Teenager to Loadsamoney – made him a one-man comic institution.For this new solo tour, the 64-year-old resurrects a selection of his alter egos, discusses his career and fields questions.Rachel AroestiScarpettaPrime Video, 11 March Nicole Kidman plays slightly against her recent TV type of icy uber-wealthy matriarchs in this new procedural adapted from Patricia Cornwell’s mega-selling novel series about a brilliant-yet-troubled forensic pathologist.The vibe is noirish Silent Witness, but Jamie Lee Curtis lightens the mood as the protagonist’s elder sister.RoosterNow & Sky Comedy, 9 March, 9pm Another fish-out-of-water dramedy from the brains behind Ted Lasso.

Steve Carell’s Greg, a famous author of lowbrow fiction, visits his college professor daughter (Charly Clive) who is distraught after a romantic betrayal.Soon he’s accepted a guest lectureship and is knee-deep in campus life.Will he learn any lessons about parenthood along the way?A Woman of SubstanceChannel 4, 11 March, 9pm From teenage servant to head of a business empire, Emma Harte’s dizzying ascent of the social ladder in early 20th-century England is chronicled in a new adaptation of Barbara Taylor Bradford’s 1979 novel.Brenda Blethyn plays the imperious older Emma, while Outlander’s Jessica Reynolds is her furiously ambitious younger self.The Claudia Winkleman ShowiPlayer & BBC One, 13 March, 10.

40pm The befringed presenter attempts to fill Graham Norton’s Friday night chatshow shoes; a task far trickier than comforting anxious celebrities on Strictly or giving Traitors contestants goosebumps,Her charm may be copper bottomed, but does Winkleman have the nerve to ask those all-important awkward questions? RAJohn Carpenter’s Toxic CommandoPC, Xbox, PS5; out 12 March A vehicle-based co-op shooter, pitching heavily armed warriors against hordes of zombies in an apocalyptic hellzone,With a story and soundtrack by Carpenter himself, this should be the cross between Left 4 Dead and Escape from New York we’ve surely all been waiting for,Fatal Frame 2: Crimson Butterfly Remake PC, Xbox, PS5, Switch 2; out 12 March Often overlooked as a survival horror progenitor, the Fatal Frame series provides some of the best jump scares in the genre,This instalment has sisters Mio and Mayu revisiting their haunted village.

The remake updates the visuals but keeps the spooky shocks.Beware.Keith StuartCobrah – Torn Out now Swedish multi-disciplinary artist Clara Christensen, AKA Cobrah, follows up last year’s collaboration with fellow agit-pop experimentalist Ashnikko with this goth-tinged debut album.Featuring production from the likes of Illangelo (the Weeknd) and Machinedrum (Dawn Richard), Torn is a bold statement of intent.Harry Styles – Kiss All the Time.

Disco, Occasionally Out now Taking inspiration from bands such as LCD Soundsystem and the Rapture, Harry Styles’s fourth solo album swaps rustic soft-rock for more interesting electronic textures, as showcased on gently evolving lead single Aperture.Elsewhere, Season 2 Weight Loss and Pop head straight for the dancefloor.Flying Lotus – Big Mama Out now Since 2019’s Flamagra album, mind-melting producer-rapper Steven Ellison, AKA Flying Lotus, has continued his sidestep into film, directing last year’s sci-fi horror Ash.It was during shooting that Ellison started work on Big Mama, an eight-track EP that aims to simplify his electronic excursions.Bonnie “Prince” Billy – We Are Together Again Out now The 31st album from US singer-songwriter Will Oldham features a host of guests, giving its well-worn folk a spontaneous spirit.

The gorgeous Hey Little, for example, is a string-assisted duet with Catherine Irwin that feels like it might buckle under the weight of its prettiness.MCLogic1000 & Heléna Star Present TherapyPodcast Season two of this artfully crafted podcast on the realities of being a woman in the music industry kicks off with DJs and hosts Logic1000 and Heléna Star interviewing singer-songwriter Tyson on the perils of social media.How Different Are Our Inner Monologues?YouTube Most of us have an inner voice but this video essay presents a convincing argument that none of them are the same.Some people have multiple, while others “see” with their mind’s eye and a few have none at all.How Did We Get Here? BBC Sounds Jonny Dymond’s 10-part series on the history of the Israel-Palestine conflict is a thorough primer on today’s ongoing conflict, covering everything from the 19th-century Muslim conquest to Israel’s early years, both Intifadas and beyond.

Ammar Kalia
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Investors are expecting Donald Trump to back down in the war with Iran – but what if he doesn’t?

Investors over the past year have learned that Donald Trump has a boundless capacity to quickly reverse course in the face of acute political or market pressures.But a week since the United States and Israel launched missile strikes on Iran, there are fears the war could morph into a protracted conflict.In purely economic terms, the war has brought about what has long been considered a worst-case scenario from a conflict in the Middle East: the closure of the strait of Hormuz, through which travels a fifth of the world’s oil and gas supplies.Since the start of the hostilities, the global benchmark oil price has jumped by 17% to more than US$85 a barrel, triggering shock waves through financial markets.The Australian sharemarket has been relatively shielded from the worst of the fallout, but still suffered a steep 3

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Ian Arnot obituary

My friend and former colleague Ian Arnot, who has died of cancer aged 45, was an LGBTQ+ activist, charity leader and fellow of the Chartered Institute of PR (CIPR). He was also a longstanding non-executive director in the charitable sector in Edinburgh, and served as BT’s head of corporate communications from 2020 to 2025.Ian became well known in media and political circles in Scotland and London during his 24-year career with BT Group. He was appointed a chartered fellow of CIPR in 2023, in recognition of his outstanding contribution to the institute and the profession, and was elected vice-chair of CIPR Scotland in 2025. He was about to start a new role with the IHG hotel group at the time of his terminal diagnosis, which he bore with typical resilience, courage and hope

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UK arts must not be sacrificed for speculative AI gains, peers say

The UK’s creative industries must not be sacrificed in the pursuit of speculative gains in AI technology, a House of Lords committee has warned, as the government prepares to reveal the economic cost of proposals to change copyright rules.A report by peers has urged ministers to develop a licensing regime for the use of creative works in AI products and abandon proposals to let tech firms use the work of novelists, artists, writers and journalists without permission.The call from the House of Lords communications and digital committee comes as the government prepares to release an economic impact assessment of proposed changes to copyright law, as well as a progress update on a consultation about the legal overhaul, by a deadline of 18 March.Barbara Keeley, a Labour peer and committee chair, said the UK’s creative industries faced a “clear and present danger” from AI firms using their work without credit or payment.“AI may contribute to our future economic growth, but the UK creative industries create jobs and economic value now,” she said

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Mark Zuckerberg says criminal behavior on Facebook inevitable

Harms to children, such as sexual exploitation and detriments to mental health, are inevitable on Meta’s platforms, the company’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Instagram leader Adam Mosseri said in taped depositions played at a trial in New Mexico on Tuesday and Wednesday.“I just think if you’re serving billions of people, the unfortunate reality is that some very small percent of them are going to be criminals, and we should work as hard as we can to stop that activity from happening,” said Zuckerberg. “I don’t think that the standard for our platforms would be that you should assume that it will ever be perfect.”Meta’s apps, which include Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, are among the most popular in the world, each with 3 billion monthly active users.The trial has set the social media giant against New Mexico’s attorney general, who alleges that Meta’s platforms put profits and user engagement over child safety

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Rory McIlroy to defend Players title despite withdrawal from Invitational

Rory McIlroy is confident of defending his Players Championship title from Thursday despite withdrawing from the Arnold Palmer Invitational 35 minutes before his third round. McIlroy suffered back spasms, with the Northern Irishman unwilling to potentially put appearances at the Players and next month’s Masters at risk by taking to the course at Bay Hill. McIlroy will also be defending the crown at Augusta National.“While warming up in the gym this morning, I felt a small twinge in my back,” McIlroy said. “As I started hitting balls on the range before the round, it worsened and developed into muscle spasms in my lower back

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Italy v England: Six Nations 2026 – as it happened

I’m still slack-jawed. I said at the start that I wouldn’t be shocked if Italy won, but that’s clearly not the case.History made. What a night for Italian rugby. A new low for England and Steve Borthwick who must be wondering if he’ll still have a job in two weeks