How faith-based entertainment has made a Hollywood comeback
The trend includes a rise in confessional films and TV series depicting specific faiths, predominantly Christianity
© Terry Hines & Associates
The trend includes a rise in confessional films and TV series depicting specific faiths, predominantly Christianity
© Terry Hines & Associates
Davies has drawn criticism from online commentators, who have highlighted her previous dance experience

© BBC
Simon Cowell has suggested disgruntled past X Factor stars swap careers and “become accountants”, in response to a wave of criticism from some of the show’s former participants.

© Netflix
Exclusive global rights to the year’s biggest night in film will move to the video platform for a four year period
The Oscars will be moving from broadcast to online as part of a multi-year new deal with YouTube.
From 2029, the video platform will have exclusive global rights to Hollywood’s biggest night, including the ceremony but also red carpet coverage, behind-the-scenes content and Governors Ball access. The deal will run until 2033.
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© Photograph: Matt Sayles/Invision/AP

© Photograph: Matt Sayles/Invision/AP

© Photograph: Matt Sayles/Invision/AP
The great maverick image-maker, who was praised for inventing ‘result-wear’ yet only staged six shows, was adored by stars and Queen Camilla – and cut Mick Jagger’s Gimme Shelter trousers in his first job
Antony Price, the maverick British designer and theatrical “image maker” has died aged 80. He was among the first to combine music, theatre and fashion, helping to craft Roxy Music’s glam rock aesthetic and designing Duran Duran’s yacht rock tailoring a decade later. More recently, he became Queen Camilla’s go-to designer.
Often described as the greatest designer you’ve never heard of, Price only ever staged six shows – or “fashion extravaganzas” – in his 55-year career but just last month returned to the London catwalk for the first time in more than 30 years with a show in collaboration with 16Arlington. There, Lily Allen created headlines by modelling a black velvet “revenge dress”.
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© Photograph: Sarah Lee/The Guardian

© Photograph: Sarah Lee/The Guardian

© Photograph: Sarah Lee/The Guardian
The film-maker, whose 1971 feature about queer life has been described as Germany’s ‘Stonewall moment’, married his long-term partner on Friday
Rosa von Praunheim, a key figure of the New German Cinema movement who made taboo-breaking films about queer life and scandalised the country when he outed German celebrities on live TV, has died aged 83.
German media reported that Praunheim died in Berlin in the early hours of Wednesday morning, just days after marrying his long-term partner at a ceremony in the German capital on Friday.
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© Photograph: snapshot-photography/KC Kompe/Shutterstock

© Photograph: snapshot-photography/KC Kompe/Shutterstock

© Photograph: snapshot-photography/KC Kompe/Shutterstock
The ‘Vanity Fair’ piece revealed candid confessions from White House chief of staff Susie Wiles

© Getty Images/ABC The View

© Matt Sayles/Invision/AP, File
YouTube has won the right to exclusively broadcast the awards show from 2029

© Invision/AP
A Spinal Tap concert film had been set to arrive in cinemas next year

© 2025 Invision

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Will Ferrell almost had a completely different co-star in the holiday classic

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Son of Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner who is being held without bail did not enter a plea
Nick Reiner, who has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder in the killing of his parents, acclaimed actor and director Rob Reiner and photographer Michele Singer Reiner, made his first appearance in court on Wednesday.
The 32-year-old, who is being held without bail, did not enter a plea, and his arraignment has been delayed until January.
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© Photograph: Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images

© Photograph: Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images

© Photograph: Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images
The actor has said Shakespeare’s language can be understood ‘in the body’. I couldn’t disagree more
I want to believe in reincarnation because I want to come back as Paul Mescal. What it must be like to be irresistible. I’m sure it gets wearing, but I’d still like to give it a try, just for research purposes. Not so much for the carnal stuff, but for the way every word he utters is taken to be as beautiful as he is. Intoxicated by their admiration, his admirers leap headfirst into the still waters of his pronouncements apparently certain of hidden depths thereunder.
So it has been with the reaction to how he comforted his director when she confessed, in so many words, that she couldn’t always grasp what Shakespeare was on about. We’ve all been there. At least I have. There there, quoth Mescal: “Listen, if Shakespeare is performed right, you don’t have to understand what they’re saying. You feel it in the body, the language is written like that.”
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© Photograph: Courtesy of Focus Features/© 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

© Photograph: Courtesy of Focus Features/© 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

© Photograph: Courtesy of Focus Features/© 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

Les fêtes de fin d'année arrivent à grands pas. Pour profiter de la magie ambiante, voici les 25 meilleures séries de Noël, à découvrir sur les plateformes de streaming. Avec un chocolat chaud dans les mains et un plaid sur les genoux, bien sûr.

Les fêtes de fin d'année arrivent à grands pas. Pour profiter de la magie ambiante, voici les 25 meilleures séries de Noël, à découvrir sur les plateformes de streaming. Avec un chocolat chaud dans les mains et un plaid sur les genoux, bien sûr.
The Nazis adopted Beethoven’s Ode to Joy. Happy Birthday hides a tale of corporate greed. And Putin uses Shostakovich’s Leningrad symphony as a call to arms. That’s why I put them in my soundtrack to the complexities of human existence
The idea was always a ludicrous one: to reduce millennia of human musical history – not to mention billennia of the Earth’s sonic geology – into a book of 50 pieces of music. And yet that’s the challenge I decided to take on. The most pressing question was: why? To which my answer was: the inevitable failures and gaps of the project are precisely where its interest lies.
The next concern was how. Called A History of the World in 50 Pieces, the book is not a digested history of music, nor a list of my favourite songs, performances or recordings. Instead, it’s centred on the definition of a “piece of music”. This is a democratic principle – a belief that works don’t belong only to their creators but are shared and reinterpreted by generations of musicians at distances of time, geography and technology, in ways their original composers and performers could not imagine.
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© Photograph: Anthony Anex/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Anthony Anex/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Anthony Anex/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
The $40m film – directed by Brett Ratner, who has been accused of sexual misconduct – follows Melania Trump in the days before the 2025 inauguration
Amazon has released the first trailer for next year’s documentary on Melania Trump.
The film will follow the first lady in the 20 days before the 2025 inauguration and has “unprecedented access” with promises of “exclusive footage capturing critical meetings, private conversations, and never-before-seen environments”.
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© Photograph: YouTube

© Photograph: YouTube

© Photograph: YouTube
Late-night hosts discussed the White House chief of staff ’s shocking and revealing interviews with Vanity Fair
Late-night hosts reacted to White House chief of staff Susie Wiles’s revealing interview with Vanity Fair.
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© Photograph: Youtube

© Photograph: Youtube

© Photograph: Youtube
Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montreal
The birth of the People’s Republic is seen as a time of drab buildings. But this dazzling show, featuring a factory in a cave and a denounced roof, tells a wildly different story
In 1954, an issue of Manhua, a state-sponsored satirical magazine in China, declared: “Some architects blindly worship the formalist styles of western bourgeois design. As a result, grotesque and reactionary buildings have appeared.”
Beneath the headline Ugly Architecture, humorous cartoons of weird buildings fill the page. There is a modernist cylinder with a neoclassical portico bolted on to the front. Another blobby building is framed by an arc of ice-cream cone-shaped columns. An experimental bus stop features a bench beneath an impractical cuboid canopy, “unable to protect you from wind, rain or sun”, as a passerby observes. “Why don’t these buildings adopt the Chinese national style?” asks another bewildered figure, as he cowers beneath a looming glass tower that bears all the hallmarks of the corrupt, capitalist west.
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© Photograph: (no credit)

© Photograph: (no credit)

© Photograph: (no credit)