From Project Hail Mary to Saturday Night Live UK: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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Scientist Ryan Gosling is alone in deep space – or is he? – and America’s famed topical satire is given a British angleProject Hail MaryOut now Novelist Andy Weir’s brand of comic, semi-plausible sci-fi led to Ridley Scott’s The Martian – now Phil Lord and Christopher Miller will be hoping to repeat something of the same success.Ryan Gosling is the lead of a caper in which a science teacher wakes up on a spaceship on a desperate mission in deep space.La GraziaOut now Italian star Toni Servillo reunites with director Paolo Sorrentino for another collaboration exploring conflicts between personal freedom and public obligations.This time, an Italian president must navigate various moral dilemmas, including potentially pardoning two murderers.Broken EnglishOut now Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard’s documentary about Marianne Faithfull eschews convention to explore its topic through devices including the Ministry of Not Forgetting – an imaginary space where actual memories can collide with myth-making.

Contributors include Tilda Swinton, George MacKay, Nick Cave and Courtney Love,Dead Man’s WireOut now Gus Van Sant directs this crime thriller based on the true story of Tony Kiritsis, a kidnapper who took his mortgage broker hostage for 63 hours, setting up a “dead man’s wire” contraption that meant that if anyone shot Kiritsis, the mortgage broker would be shot too,Bill Skarsgård stars,Catherine BrayGunna25 to 31 March; tour starts LondonGunna’s sixth album, The Last Wun, cemented the Georgia rapper as one of hip-hop’s newest superstars,After a UK Top 10 – his fifth in a row – he arrives in arenas this week, offering a suitable environment for atmospheric trap anthems such as One of Wun and FukUMean.

Michael Cragg6 Music festivalVarious venues, Greater Manchester, 25 to 28 March Spotlighting independent venues including Band on the Wall, YES and the Eccles Town Hall Ballroom, this year’s festival features established acts such as Bloc Party and Courtney Barnett, as well as newcomers Jacob Alon and Wesley Joseph.MCDave Holland and Lionel LouekeUnion Chapel, London, 23 March With United, their widely acclaimed 2024 album, guitarist Lionel Loueke and bassist Dave Holland showed how much global-jazzy lyricism, dazzling improv and urgent edginess two musicians with their vast collective experience can conjure.John FordhamTansy Davies: The Passion of Mary MagdaleneBarbican Hall, London, 24 March Adventurous period-performance ensemble the Dunedin Consort present a major world premiere.This new oratorio revisits the Passion story from Mary Magdalene’s perspective.John Butt conducts, with Anna Dennis as Mary Magdalene.

Flora WillsonFrank BowlingThe Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, 27 March to 17 January This mesmerising visionary paints on a heroic, historical scale in haunting abstract veils of molten colour.He was a contemporary of Hockney and other British pop artists but, unlike them, embraced the sublime modernism of the American abstract expressionist school, whose grandeur helps him to evoke personal and global maps.Hurvin AndersonTate Britain, London, 26 March to 23 August Paintings that subtly nudge realistic, well-observed scenes, indoors and out, into a lyrical poetry of colour.Greens and blacks, blues and yellows bloom on Anderson’s brush.His landscapes lead your eye deeper and deeper into worlds that at first seem ordinary and quiet but reveal multitudes.

A very fine artist.Bruegel to RembrandtCompton Verney, Warwickshire, to 28 June The visions of Pieter Bruegel the Elder delight and fascinate with carnivals and monstrous wonders.Yet his fine drawings reveal what a precise and organised artist he is.This exhibition takes his designs as its starting point to survey north European Renaissance and baroque drawings up to Rembrandt’s great sketches.Catherine OpieNational Portrait Gallery, London, to 31 May Identity is held up to the light in Opie’s full-faced, highly formal yet profoundly ambiguous photographs.

Her people look at you defiantly, and she honours them with portraiture in a grand vein, in pictures that echo such old masters as Ingres and even Rembrandt – but queered.A provocative, powerful artist.Jonathan JonesLes Liaisons DangereusesNational Theatre, London, to 6 June A new staging of Christopher Hampton’s astute adaptation of Choderlos de Laclos’ vicious novel.Lesley Manville and Aidan Turner star as the two scheming aristocrats in this brooding production from Marianne Elliott.Miriam GillinsonHenry VRoyal Shakespeare theatre, Stratford-on-Avon, to 25 April Astonishingly, Tamara Harvey is the first woman to direct Shakespeare’s powerful history play at the RSC.

Starring Alfred Enoch, the production asks urgent questions about the nature of leadership.MGScottish Dance Theatre: Scottish RootsDunvegan Community Hall, Skye, 25 March; Sabhal Mòr Ostaig, Skye, 26 MarchScottish Dance Theatre celebrates its 40th anniversary this year and is currently roaming the Inner Hebrides with a triple bill that includes director Joan Clevillé’s piece O Chiadain An Lo, set to music by piper Brìghde Chaimbeul.Lyndsey WinshipDavid ElmsThe Old Hairdresser’s, Glasgow, 22 March; touring to 30 May David Elms Describes a Room is a soothing improvised show whose premise – the comedian fields contributions to build up a picture of an imaginary room – is both emotionally involving and understatedly clever.Rachel AroestiSomething Very Bad Is Going to HappenNetflix, 26 March Produced by the creators of Stranger Things, this camply ominous thriller is set in the week leading up to a wedding.The bride (Camila Morrone) is consumed by dread; soon her instincts are proved correct.

Adam DiMarco and Jennifer Jason Leigh co-star,Saturday Night Live UKSky One & Now, 21 March, 10pm It’s a big swing: our very own version of the 50-year-old comedy juggernaut, staffed by a raft of brilliant writers and performers,There’s no telling how good tonight’s opener will be (they’re probably still writing it) but, if successful, this could be a major shot in the arm for British entertainment,BaitPrime Video, 25 March Riz Ahmed showcases his comedy chops and screenwriting skills with this genre-blending, whiplash-inducing satire about a London actor who spirals after flubbing his James Bond audition,Patrick Stewart cameos and the reliably hilarious Guz Khan co-stars as a wheeler-dealer cousin.

The PittHBO Max, 26 March Until now, most HBO shows were available via Sky; from Thursday they’ll be on their own streaming service too (though HBO Max is still included as part of Sky subscriptions).Arriving as part of the launch is this real-time medical drama, which has dominated the discourse and awards season in the US.RALife Is Strange: ReunionOut 26 March, PC, PS5, Xbox Series X|S The time-warping narrative adventure returns with original characters Max and Chloe reuniting to face a new apocalyptic threat.Series fans are concerned about some retconning to the story, but developer Deep Nine has promised a highly authentic final chapter.Expectations – and emotions – will be high.

Project Songbird Out 26 March, PC, PS5, Xbox Series X/S A struggling musician is offered the chance to record a new album in a remote cabin, deep in the Appalachian forest – but there’s more out there than wildlife and silence.A deliciously creepy horror adventure from Conner Rush, the solo developer behind acclaimed supernatural thriller Summerland.Keith StuartGrace Ives – GirlfriendOut now On her third album, co-produced alongside Ariel Rechtshaid (Sky Ferreira, Haim), New Yorker Ives explores the personal fallout following the success of 2022’s second album Janky Star.On single Avalanche, this is housed in a towering alt-pop confection, while My Mans peers into the abyss via blown-out balladry.BTS – ArirangOut now An all-star supporting cast, including Diplo and Mike Will Made-It, join the K-pop boyband behemoths on this hugely anticipated comeback album.

Made after BTS fulfilled their military service duties, and following a string of solo projects, Arirang has a lot to live up to.Underscores – UOut now Eschewing the concept-heavy, folk-pop mashup of 2023’s Wallsocket, US musician April Harper Grey returns to gonzo electronic textures on this riotous third album.Splenetic single Music channels 2010s EDM, Do It is pure robo-Britney, while Tell Me (U Want It) is described by Grey as “music for my iPhone spy movie”.Naomi Scott – FIGOut now The star of music industry-set horror film Smile 2 moves from fictional pop star to the real deal on this debut album.Sweet Nausea and Losing You channel the tactile alt-pop of Blood Orange, while the playful Cherry hints at a 90s Janet Jackson obsession.

MCNational Gallery of Art Imagesnga.gov/artworks Washington DC’s National Gallery of Art has made available to download a trove of more than 60,000 high-resolution images from its collection.Explore everything from Mark Rothko’s sketchbooks to Rembrandt self-portraits.Inheritance: SamsungPodcast, from 23 March Tackling real-life succession stories, this engrossing series from BBC World Service examines the family saga behind South Korean tech giant Samsung.Elise Hu tracks the Lee family story from grocers to toppling a government.

The American BuffaloPBS America, 24 March, 1,15pm Ken Burns’s two-part film on the history of the US’s national mammal is typically comprehensive, tracing Indigenous people’s spiritual connection to the buffalo then colonial settlers’ near-extinction of the entire population,Ammar Kalia
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US interest in electric vehicles surges as gas prices jump amid Iran war

US car buyers are showing a surge in interest in electric vehicles after Donald Trump’s decision to attack Iran helped cause a major jump in gasoline prices.The cost to refuel a vehicle in the US is at its highest level in nearly three years, with the average national price of gas standing at $3.90 a gallon on Friday.This increase has been driven by the rising global cost of oil in the wake of the US and Israel’s bombing of Iran, a major oil producer. The conflict has resulted in the strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway that conveys around a fifth of the world’s oil, being shut off by Iran

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‘It’s come at the wrong time’: how Iran war has floored the Gulf as a sports hub

The sight of Nasser al-Khelaifi grounded in Doha when Paris Saint Germain hosted Chelsea in the last-16 of the Champions League last week provided a symbolic illustration of the fragility of the Gulf’s sports project amid the conflict in the Middle East.Al-Khelaifi is the president of PSG, the chair of Qatar Sports Investments and, most crucially, the European Football Clubs, a lobby group that, along with Uefa, runs the Champions League. He is seen as the second-most powerful individual in world football, after the Fifa president, Gianni Infantino. Yet, with Qatari airspace closed, the 52-year-old was forced to miss his first PSG match for years.After watching PSG’s thrilling 5-2 victory in the first leg on the sports channel of the global TV network he also chairs, BeIN Media Group, Al-Khelaifi made it to London to watch Luis Enrique’s side inflict further misery on Chelsea with a 3-0 win in the second leg at Stamford Bridge on Tuesday

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Musk responsible for Twitter investors’ stock dropping when he bought company, jury rules

A California jury has ruled that Elon Musk is responsible for Twitter investors’ stock plummeting when he sought to buy the social media platform for $44bn in 2022. Jurors handed the win to a group of investors who sued the billionaire saying he publicly disparaged the company with the aim of bringing down Twitter’s stock price to get a better bargain.The trial, which began earlier this month in federal court in San Francisco, focused on whether Musk intended to move the market with his comments. During a six-month period in 2022, after his offer to buy Twitter, he posted constantly to his millions of followers that the social network was rife with bots that produced spam and created fake accounts.Musk did eventually buy Twitter for $54

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Senior European journalist suspended over AI-generated quotes

The publisher of the Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf and the Irish Independent has suspended one of its senior journalists after he admitted using AI to “wrongly put words into people’s mouths”.Peter Vandermeersch, the former head of the Irish operations at Mediahuis, said he “fell into the trap of hallucinations” – the term for AI-generated errors – when using the technology.Vandermeersch, a fellow of “journalism and society” at the European publishing group, has been suspended from his role.The experienced journalist said he had summarised reports using AI tools such as ChatGPT, Perplexity and Google’s NotebookLM, and not checked whether the quotes from those summaries were accurate. He subsequently published them in his Substack newsletter

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‘It’s an excuse’: New York Giants’ Cam Skattebo says CTE and asthma are ‘fake’

New York Giants running back Cam Skattebo is facing backlash after dismissing both chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and asthma as “fake” during a recent podcast appearance.Speaking on the Bring the Juice podcast, the 24-year-old was asked whether he believes CTE – a degenerative brain condition linked to repeated head trauma – is real. Skattebo called it an “excuse”, agreeing with the host before making a similar claim about asthma.“Yeah, asthma’s fake too,” Skattebo said, adding at one point that people should “just breathe air”.The comments have drawn criticism given the scientific consensus around both conditions

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The WNBA’s historic deal teaches girls everywhere to advocate for themselves | Etan Thomas

I interviewed Jemele Hill for my podcast The Rematch and asked for her reaction to the WNBA’s landmark new collective bargaining agreement, a seven-year deal that includes a salary cap increase to $7m (up from $1.5m in 2025), maximum salaries approaching $1.4m, 20% revenue sharing, expanded rosters, charter flights and more.Hill didn’t mince words.“Unfortunately, there’s still a very prevalent attitude when it comes to women’s sports that, ‘Hey sweetie, you should just be happy that somebody is letting you put on a uniform and bounce a ball,’” she said