Film
Journey into a nightmare
David AttenboroughAll the trimmings
PHILIPPA HAWKER‘Men are more exiting to watch’
DAVID STRATTONThe proof is in the painting — or is it?
Patricia AndersonForever groovy
stephen romeiDeep Throat’s role ‘over-hyped’
Boer DengHeart of resilience
Philippa HawkerKing Jr hopes for dad’s magic
Stephen RomeiHanging Rock truth rarely told
SIMONE FOX KOOBBeatriz trumped
DAVID STRATTONConjurer to the stars
GLYNIS TRAILL-NASHThe face of the future
Philippa HawkerA dignified rage
Stephen RomeiQ&A: ‘This is sacrosanct’
Megan LehmannWhy tennis doesn’t work in film
Kevin MaherFrom the east with love
Philippa HawkerThoughtful director’s final cut
Philippa HawkerNationalistic film airs in Sydney
PRIMROSE RIORDANFrightfully ugly endurance test
DAVID STRATTONLove match
Philippa HawkerMORE STORIES
Pahud’s yin meets Tognetti’s yang
VINCENT PLUSHPahud begins with CPE Bach, an unorthodox reading that invests every dimension with some new function.
Making the cut on judgment day
Ashleigh WilsonIntriguing details emerge in a fine Archibald profile.
Scintillating play about nothing
CHRIS BOYDNoel Coward was barely 20 when he met star of stage and screen Laurette Taylor, whom he immortalised in Hay Fever.
Tackling racism, just for laughs
Justin BurkeFor 21-year-old indigenous student Enoch Mailangi, getting knocked back for an ABC internship was a blessing in disguise.
‘I’ve learnt to just shut up a bit’
Eleanor MillsTurning 60, comedy queen Dawn French gets serious about sharing her hard-won wisdom.
A little history of music
DARRYN KINGA 24-Decade History of Popular Music is a performance-art drag show that feels, at times, like an epic house party.
Bosch in a bad way
Graeme BlundellThe broody LA detective is a man on the edge, adding to the tension in this exceptional third season.
Turnbull’s backstage pass
TIM DOUGLASEsther Hannaford probably wished she had on more than a bathrobe when the PM meet her backstage last Saturday.
All the trimmings
PHILIPPA HAWKERJill Bilcock knows what she wants — the ‘innovative, unusual and visually extraordinary’ — and shuns the ‘bogus’.