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Music writer Izzy Langhamer covers hide and seek festivals sophomore year, its joys and its kinks.
Lizzie Wallis reviews the Royal Shakespeare Company’s Dream, a play using VR, based on Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Annie Dabb explains how Andy Burnham has already fulfilled his promise to make Manchester the perfect place to grow old
UMDS is putting on a plethora of student-crafted work this week, exploring a range of subjects from race and climate change to experimentations with film 7th-13th December.
Drama Society is showcasing their autumn fringe festival online to provide a creative platform for their members to show off their work
An Interview with Cecilia Alfonso-Eaton, University of Manchester Drama Society’s new inclusion officer on her values and how she is striving to ensure inclusion within the University’s drama society.
The Twilight companion novel no one asked for in 2020
Calm with Horses blends a gripping underworld story with a personal drama to create universal moral dilemmas, writes Michal Wasilewski.
Manchester-based creator Acid Maia sets the scene for the extensive and ‘genre-bending’ body of work in the cataclysmic places within our world where our concrete societies and the wild collide; the rural space that walks the line of two sublime forces that do battle every day. The contrast is present within the overgrown ivy on […]
Writer Tom Kuson rolls the dice and sees what Risks the horror-comedy takes as it climbs Snakes and Ladders to its conclusion (Sorry about the puns)
The anthology is returning, argues Josh Sandy, and thankfully not in the form of a GCSE booklet
Contributor Josh Sandy revisits one of Manchester’s greatest rock and roll stars Oasis as 25 years ago, they released their iconic debut Definitely Maybe
Eva Gerretsen considers the importance of the Asia Triennial Festival 2018 in a Society increasingly dominated with questions of identity: she reviews the opening night at HOME
Frank Radcliffe-Adam considers the impact of Time upon a nation recovering from Apartheid, reviewing William Kentridge’s mixed-media exhibition ‘Thick Time’ at The Whitworth
J.J. Abrams’ enigmatic sci-fi franchise returns out of the blue, this time on Netflix
James Gill talks us through the coming week’s events at HOME Cinema
Cassie Hyde praises Kristen Stewart in her latest endeavour
This dark and both vocal and visually spectacular is any Meat Loaf’s fan dream come true
Subtly finetuning their sound, Real Estate have delivered a poignant and succinct album that expertly blends sunny guitars with contemplative lyricism
50 Shades Darker is a failed, airbrushed perfume advert