How to Make a Killing to Wu-Tang Clan: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

A picture


Glen Powell indulges in some murder most profitable, and the influential rap collective arrive in the UK complete with a clutch of peerless classicsHow to Make a KillingOut nowLoosely inspired by the much-loved Ealing comedy Kind Hearts and Coronets, here is a dark comedy that sees Glen Powell play an upwardly mobile schemer who isn’t afraid to murder his way to his inheritance.Directed by John Patton Ford (Emily the Criminal).Reminders of HimOut nowMaika Monroe (It Follows) stars as a woman who goes to prison following a car accident in which her boyfriend (Rudy Pankow) is killed.On release, she finds herself drawn to a handsome local bar owner (Tyriq Withers).Romance based on the bestselling Colleen Hoover novel.

Everybody to Kenmure StreetOut nowWhen the Home Office sent vehicles to Glasgow’s Kenmure Street to potentially deport some residents, everyone from the activist known as Van Man to a local imam to various schoolchildren spontaneously blocked the street.This documentary, winner of a special jury award at Sundance, tells the story of eight extraordinary hours in UK protest history.A Pale View of HillsOut nowEtsuko, a Japanese woman living in the UK, explores her memories of summer in 1950s Nagasaki, alongside an attempt to reckon with the more recent suicide of her daughter.Adaptation of Kazuo Ishiguro’s debut novel, starring Suzu Hirose, Fumi Nikaido and Yō Yoshida, and written and directed by Kei Ishikawa.Catherine BrayRenée RappAO Arena, Manchester, 18 March; OVO Arena, London, 19 & 20 March; touring to 22 MarchLast summer, actor and proper pop star Rapp’s second album Bite Me arrived chock full of personality-packed bops and crashed into the UK No 1 spot.

On this arena tour expect her to tear through the likes of recent brat-pop smash Leave Me Alone.Michael CraggWu-Tang ClanThe O2, London, 17 March & 18 March; Co-op Live, Manchester, 19 MarchThe hugely influential hip-hop collective arrive in the UK as part of their Wu-Tang Forever: The Final Chamber tour.With a focus on fan service, expect deep cuts, rarely performed tracks and peerless classics such as Protect Ya Neck, Triumph and the Top 10 head-knocker Gravel Pit.MCMark Lockheart Shapeshifter TrioThe Hive, Shrewsbury, 14 March; 1000 Trades, Birmingham, 20 March; touring to 21 MarchMark Lockheart, the UK saxophonist-composer, has been a founder member of two great European bands: the innovative Loose Tubes orchestra and the unique global-jazz small group Polar Bear.Now he launches Shapeshifter, a typically empathic, improv-leaning trio with subtle partners Huw V Williams (bass) and Jay Davis (drums).

John FordhamRoyal Opera, Wagner’s SiegfriedRoyal Opera House, London, 17 March to 6 AprilOpera doesn’t get more ambitious – or gripping – than Wagner’s four-part Ring cycle,New productions are a massive undertaking,Following the acclaimed first two instalments of Australian director Barrie Kosky’s new Royal Opera staging, Siegfried features German über-tenor Andreas Schager in the title role,He heads a superb cast conducted by Antonio Pappano,Flora WillsonIn BloomAshmolean Museum, Oxford, 19 March to 16 AugustA portrait of the 17th-century gardener Sir John Tradescant, whose collection helped create the Ashmolean Museum, is one of the curious and beautiful images in this survey of flowers in art, science and trade.

Other delights range from Iznik floral ceramics to botanical drawings and paintings.Spring’s here!Hokusai and HiroshigeWhitworth Art Gallery, Manchester, 14 March to 15 NovemberThe scintillating masterpieces of Japan’s two greatest printmakers crossed continents and revolutionised art.Van Gogh and Whistler were among the modernists who collected and revered them.These artists knew nothing of the society and religion that Hiroshige and Hokusai depicted but found them liberating – as we still do.VanbrughSir John Soane’s Museum, London to 28 JuneThe Baroque genius Sir John Vanbrugh found Britain still dominated by half-timbered houses and gave it stupendous palaces that still dazzle in their exploration of extremes of architectural spectacle.

Even if you’ve never visited his masterpiece Castle Howard you’ve seen it on screen, in Brideshead, Bridgerton and more.Sarah MorrisWhite Cube Mason’s Yard, London, to 9 MayThis rigorous abstract painter has been creating grids, networks and systems of line and colour since the 1990s.New York skylines and the Manhattan street plan echo in her work just as in the late paintings of Mondrian.She’s coolly, relentlessly modern, and you can picture her work in penthouses.Jonathan JonesJanine HarouniNewcastle upon Tyne, 19 March; Glasgow, 20 March; touring to 22 May The Staten Island-raised, London-based standup performed her last show heavily pregnant: now she’s back on tour telling tales from the frontline of motherhood.

This Is What You Waited For contrasts her own childrearing style with her parents’ techniques in a series of clever, cathartic and characteristically slick gags.Rachel AroestiTeeth ’N’ SmilesDuke of York’s theatre, London, to 6 June Daniel Raggett’s revival marks 50 years since David Hare’s play premiered at the Royal Court.Rebecca Lucy Taylor – AKA Self Esteem – stars as singer Maggie, combing through the wreckage of her career in one boozy night.Noughts & CrossesNew Wolsey theatre, Ipswich, 17 March to 21 March; touring to 23 May Sabrina Mahfouz’s powerful adaptation of Malorie Blackman’s modern take on Romeo and Juliet – here revived by Esther Richardson – tours the UK.Effie Ansah and James Arden star as the two teenagers struggling to live and love.

Miriam GillinsonAlexander Whitley Dance CompanySadler’s Wells East, London, 18 March to 21 MarchA double bill (The Rite of Spring/Mirror) from a choreographer intensely involved in the interactions between art and technology.Whitley uses live motion-capture and AI in the creation of his works, which in turn critique the place of tech in our lives and our relationships with intelligent machines.Lyndsey WinshipThe Other Bennet SisteriPlayer & BBC One, 15 March, 8pmLimber up for the big new Netflix Pride and Prejudice with this sidelong, sweetly comic take on Austen’s classic.Adapted from former BBC Two controller Janice Hadlow’s fan fiction-style novel – a bildungsroman for Mary, the serious, socially awkward Bennet sibling – it boasts a cast that includes Ruth Jones and Richard E Grant.Last One Laughing UKPrime Video, 19 MarchThis pared-back format – 10 comedians spend a few hours in a room together trying to keep a straight face – brought a transcendent joy to the schedules last year.

Now it returns with another stellar crop of comics, including Alan Carr, David Mitchell and Diane Morgan, plus inimitable reigning champ Bob Mortimer.Imperfect WomenApple TV+, 18 MarchIf you’ve watched TV in the past decade, you’ll be well aware that behind every seemingly perfect woman’s seemingly charmed life lies darkness, deceit and desperation.Adapted from Araminta Hall’s novel, this drama sees Elisabeth Moss, Kerry Washington and Kate Mara unite to riff on the theme once more.Jury Duty: Company RetreatPrime Video, 20 MarchThe first instalment of this curveball comedy centred on a man who believed he was being filmed while participating in jury service.In reality, everyone around him was an actor.

The result was an unusually wholesome prank show that this second series, set at a corporate awayday, aims to recreate.RACrimson DesertPC, Xbox, PS5, out 19 MarchIt’s a brave company that launches a brand new open-world role-playing adventure in 2026, so helmets off to South Korean developer Pearl Abyss.Crimson Desert is a sprawling medieval fantasy romp with steampunk dragons, mass sword fights and a swooping orchestral score.Frankly, the trailer had me at the part you ride a bear into battle.RubatoPC, PS5, Switch, out 20 MarchIn a post-apocalyptic universe, a frog with an elastic tongue must take on the forces of evil and save life as we know it.

If you’re looking for a bizarre, experimental 2D platformer that references Sonic the Hedgehog, Super Metroid and a dozen other retro classics in a frenzy of garish pixels, this is the one for you,Keith StuartKim Gordon – Play MeOut nowThe art-rock icon continues to explore pop’s perimeters on this third solo album,As with 2024’s The Collective, Play Me is produced by Justin Raisen (Sky Ferreira), the pair conjuring up ironic love songs to big tech (Dirty Tech) and disjointed political statements such as BYE BYE 25! that sound beamed in from another planet,Alexis Taylor – Paris in the Spring Out now Across his previous five solo albums, Hot Chip frontman Taylor has flitted between intimate balladry and electronic bangers, all anchored by his delicate voice,Here he channels leftfield pop, disco and even country, with support from Air’s Nicolas Godin and the Avalanches.

James Blake – Trying TimesOut nowFresh from co-producing rapper Dave’s most recent album, the tactile electro-soul practitioner returns with his seventh album.I Had a Dream She Took My Hand is a delicate swirl of loved-up affection, while Death of Love – co-produced by Blake’s actual love, Jameela Jamil – ramps up the beat-heavy atmospherics.Jack Harlow – MonicaOut nowAt his commercial peak, rapper Jack Harlow’s ubiquitous hits were typically accompanied by derision, with critics highlighting his dorky persona.Since 2023’s surprise drop Jackman, however, Harlow has taken a more serious turn, a move that continues on this fourth album.MCFrom the Minds of Jazz MusiciansPodcastMusician and academic David Schroeder hosts this fascinating series exploring improvisation and the everyday lives of contemporary jazzers.

Highlights include a deep dive with pioneering saxophonist, the 95-year-old Sonny Rollins.Wolf Escape GamesOnlineA blend of Traitors-style intrigue with brain-teasing tasks, the online escape rooms from Wolf Escape allow teams of players of all ages to explore detailed and addictive multiplayer scenarios of increasing complexity.The AlpenpostBBC SoundsHistorian Maurice Casey tells the lesser-known story of a 1930s anti-Nazi publication created by two refugee girls in this intriguing documentary.We hear how the paper kept the girls connected to their travelling activist father.Ammar Kalia
recentSee all
A picture

Rate rises, helium shortages, EV sales spikes: how is the disruption in Iran’s strait of Hormuz affecting Australia?

The Middle East conflict is causing huge disruptions to energy supplies, with knock-on effects reaching far beyond petrol prices.While the initial US-Israeli strikes on Iran drew a muted response from global markets due to expectations it would be a short conflict, there are now questions over whether the US has a clean exit strategy that would guarantee a stable resumption of trade through the crucial strait of Hormuz.Here are five ways the “largest supply disruption in history” in global oil markets is affecting Australia, from the cost of crucial imported goods to the purchasing decisions made by consumers.There was already a strong shift to electrified vehicles before the war on Iran disrupted energy markets, with new battery vehicles selling at nearly double the rate from a year ago, according to February automotive data.James Voortman, chief executive of the Australian Automotive Dealer Association, says car yards have been selling even more EVs since petrol prices started to rise

A picture

‘The sums don’t add up’: UK farmers struggle as Iran war drives up costs

The small green oilseed rape plants are buffeted by the wind on a blustery spring day. Sown last August, the crop is starting to shoot up and should be ready for harvesting in July, when it can be turned into cooking oil or biofuel.The peaceful 230-hectare (568-acre) arable farm owned by James Cox on the edge of the Cotswolds in Gloucestershire is a world away from the conflict in the Middle East. However, the consequences of US and Israeli strikes on Iran – and Tehran’s retaliation – are already rippling out to affect Cox and Britain’s other food producers.The prices of crucial farming inputs such as fuel and fertiliser have skyrocketed, just at a time when their use will increase in the coming weeks as the spring planting season gets under way and farmers use their tractors more

A picture

Trump administration to be paid $10bn for brokering TikTok deal

Donald Trump’s administration is reportedly poised to be paid $10bn by investors as part of a deal to create a US-controlled version of TikTok.The $10bn, considered by the US government as a sort of transaction fee, will be paid by the administration-friendly investors who took control of TikTok’s US operations from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, according to reporting that first appeared in the Wall Street Journal.The investors in the popular social media app include software company Oracle; MGX, an investment firm based in the United Arab Emirates; and private equity business Silver Lake. These entities, along with other backers, paid $2.5bn to the US treasury when the deal closed in January and are set to make further payments in the unusual arrangement until the total hits $10bn

A picture

Meta and Google trial: are infinite scroll and autoplay creating addicts?

It was as “easy as ABC”, claimed the lawyer prosecuting a landmark social media harm case against Meta and Google which heard closing arguments this week. The defendants were guilty, said Mark Lanier, of “addicting the brains of children”. Not true, replied the tech companies. Meta insisted providing young people with a “safer, healthier experience has always been core to our work”.Features such as autoplay videos, infinite scrolling and constantly chirruping alerts woven into the fabric of online platforms were central to the six-week trial in Los Angeles, which has been compared to the cases against tobacco companies in the 1990s

A picture

‘So close to being a special day’: Borthwick rues agony of England’s France defeat

Steve Borthwick says the pain of England’s last-gasp defeat to France can drive them on to better times despite their unsuccessful Six Nations campaign. Borthwick’s side finished second bottom of this year’s table but came agonisingly close to dashing French title hopes before losing 48-46 in one of the all-time great championship fixtures.Borthwick, who said he still believed he was “the right man to lead the team forward”, could not hide his disappointment after Thomas Ramos secured a last-gasp home victory with the final kick of an extraordinary game. “I’m really disappointed for the players and supporters … it was so close to being a special day,” he said.“We came into the tournament with high aspirations and we’re really disappointed we haven’t been able to meet those targets

A picture

Scheffler searches for form with Masters looming as Åberg leads the way at Players

There is a robotic element to Scottie Scheffler during periods of success but observing the world No 1 in times of adversity is far more intriguing. There is more – much more – to the American than meets the eye.This is a golfer who was once reduced to tears after a Ryder Cup trouncing. While all charges were eventually dropped, the mere fact Scheffler found himself in a prison jumpsuit before a round at the 2024 US PGA was highly unusual. Last summer, he was filmed in long and histrionic discussion with his coach amid struggles at the US Open