The Ultimate Guide to London Film Festival and Partygate: Exciting Entertainment Activities this Week | Culture

Going out: Cinema

CinemaBFI London Film Festival

Various venues, London, 4 to 15 October

Opening with the international premiere of Saltburn (starring Barry Keoghan, Rosamund Pike, Richard E Grant, and Carey Mulligan), London’s annual showcase of cinema blends a mixture of big hits from this year’s Cannes and Venice film festivals with lesser-known premieres of gems such as Naqqash Khalid’s excellent In Camera.

Saw X

Out now

Ever since technically popping his clogs at the end of Saw III, the shadow of John Kramer (Tobin Bell), the Jigsaw Killer, has loomed large over the franchise. For the 10th instalment, they’ve gone back in time, with a blood-soaked new self-contained adventure set in Mexico between the events of Saw and Saw II, which gives Bell more of a showcase for his range than the series has so far afforded him.

The Old Oak

Out now

Ken Loach is undeniably one of the UK’s most important filmmakers, part of the club of just 10 directors in the world who have won the Palme d’Or at Cannes twice. In this new drama, Loach explores the role a local pub plays in bringing together people from very different backgrounds.

Hocus Pocus (30th anniversary rerelease)

Out now

A beloved favorite of the LGBTQ+ community for oh so many reasons, but not least that cast: Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Kathy Najimy star as witches executed in 1693, only to be resurrected in the 1990s on Halloween. If your stomach can’t quite take Saw X, this is the perfect Halloween viewing.

Catherine Bray

Going out: Gigs

Gigs

LA Priest

2 to 7 October; tour starts Manchester

Sam Eastgate, the former frontman of gonzo dance-punkers Late of the Pier, returned earlier this year with Fase Luna, his third album as LA Priest. Recorded in Mexico and the rainforests of Costa Rica, it’s a comforting, ocean-inspired sonic exploration that should bring some escapist vibes to a handful of UK venues.

Michael Cragg

5 Seconds of Summer

3 to 5 October; tour starts Glasgow

Launched in 2011 as a slightly more rebellious One Direction, Australian manband 5 Seconds of Summer have carved out a longer career than most pop acts. Last year’s 5SOS5 was their fifth Top 2 album in the US, and this whistlestop arena tour is a good reminder of their solid pop-rock back catalogue.

MC

The Scarlet Flower

Lighthouse, Poole, 4 October

In his final year as chief conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Kirill Karabits is continuing his exploration of the music of his native Ukraine, and he opens the season with a suite from the 1906 ballet The Scarlet Flower by Thomas de Hartmann. The concert also includes Brahms’s Fourth Symphony and Rachmaninov’s Paganini Rhapsody.

Andrew Clements

Chucho Valdés

Ronnie Scott’s, London, 2 to 4 October

A multiple Grammy-winning star of Afro-Cuban jazz, the virtuoso pianist, bandleader, and longtime global-music inspiration Chucho Valdés led Irakere, one of Cuba’s most creative modern bands, for more than 30 years. His exciting quartet keeps that flame alight.

John Fordham

Going out: Art

Art

Frans Hals

National Gallery, London, 30 September to 21 January

The man who painted The Laughing Cavalier and The Lute Player gets an epic show designed to put him where he belongs, alongside Vermeer and Rembrandt as one of the greats of the 17th-century Dutch golden age. The rich and poor of his home city Haarlem come back from the dead in his humane art.

Philip Guston

Tate Modern, London, 5 October to 25 February

This radical painter began as a social realist protesting against 1930s fascism. He became an abstract expressionist finding poetry in the brush. Out of these experiences he forged a unique vision filled with grotesque, surreal and ironic caricatures of hooded Klansmen. An American answer to Goya whose art laughs in despair.

New Scottish Galleries

Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh, from 30 September

These purpose-built rooms with views over Edinburgh provide an ambitious new home for Scotland’s art, telling its story in 130 works that stress the modern. Stars of this history include Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh, Anne Redpath, and Phoebe Anna Traquair. See the Scottish colorists and other pioneers in a new light.

RE/SISTERS

Barbican Art Gallery, London, 5 October to 14 January

This exhibition argues that feminist art saw the climate crisis coming and that “women are regularly at the forefront of advocating and caring for the planet”. Under this polemical rubric, it brings together some wonderful artists including Ana Mendieta, Francesca Woodman, Barbara Kruger, Judy Chicago, Ingrid Pollard, and Diana Thater.

Jonathan Jones

Going out: Stage

Stage

Munya Chawawa

5 to 28 October; tour starts Leicester

Of all the social media comedy sensations minted during the pandemics, 30-year-old British-Zimbabwean character comedian Chawawa has been most adept at turning his view count into mainstream fame. Now, following a clutch of TV appearances – including Taskmaster – he’s moving beyond the screen with a debut live tour.

Rachel Aroesti

Dance Umbrella festival

Various venues, London, 6 to 31 October

Annual fest bringing lesser-known international artists to London, as well as homegrown talent. One highlight is the London Battle at Somerset House (7 Oct), pitting hip-hop dancers from north, east, south, and west London against each other, alongside dance workshops and an outdoor party.

Lyndsey Winship

Head Set

The Theatre Chipping Norton, 3 October; touring to 11 November

The highly original Victoria Melody takes her latest documentary-theatre show on tour. It explores the artist’s recent diagnosis of ADHD and autism and – among lots of juicy ideas – uses wearable tech to explore the potential of standup comedy as self-medication.

Miriam Gillinson

Sunset Boulevard

Savoy theatre, London, to 6 January

Nicole Scherzinger stars as Norma Desmond, a faded silent screen star yearning to make her comeback. Jamie Lloyd directs this revival of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s extravagant LA-based musical – so it should feel bang up to date.

MG

Staying in: Streaming

Streaming

Boiling Point

BBC One & iPlayer, 1 October, 9pm

A high-pressure workplace is the ideal setting for a gripping TV show – and you don’t get more stressful than a professional kitchen. In this new series, we catch up with the chefs (including Stephen Graham’s Andy) from the unbearably tense restaurant-set 2021 film of the same name.

Everything Now

Netflix, 5 October

If a week is a long time in politics, seven months is a veritable eternity in high school. That’s the premise of this new teen drama – written by Thandiwe Newton’s 22-year-old daughter Ripley Parker – which follows Mia as she returns to sixth form after being hospitalized for anorexia, only to find that life has changed radically for her peers.

Partygate

Channel 4, 3 October, 9.30pm

It was in about 2016 that satirical comedy was comprehensively outpaced by the absurdity of the actual news. Channel 4, however, has come up with a nifty solution: simply re-enact recent high-profile events, abject ridiculous

Reference

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