↩ Accueil

Vue lecture

Où précommander Mario Tennis Fever au meilleur prix ?

[Précommande] Aucun nouveau Mario Tennis n’avait vu le jour depuis 2018, Mario Tennis Aces étant jusqu’alors le dernier épisode de la licence. Une attente désormais comblée avec l’annonce de Mario Tennis Fever, dont la sortie est prévue prochainement sur Switch 2.

  •  

Dozens of historic Maseratis recreated for movie about Italian car company

Film with a cast headed by Anthony Hopkins tells the story of a supercar marque that began in a small Bologna garage

Dozens of Maseratis of 1920s and 1930s designs have been built specially for a feature film about the Italian car company’s earliest days, with a cast headed by Anthony Hopkins.

Maserati: The Brothers tells the story of siblings driven by their love of cars to create an automotive company from scratch. It all began in a little garage in the Italian city of Bologna: in 1914 they founded a sports supercar company that went on to make some of the fastest vehicles on the planet.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: courtesy of The Andrea Iervolino Company

© Photograph: courtesy of The Andrea Iervolino Company

© Photograph: courtesy of The Andrea Iervolino Company

  •  

The Pitt est la meilleure série médicale depuis Urgences (et vous ne la regardez pas encore)

Quand HBO s’intéresse enfin au genre médical, cela donne The Pitt, une série nerveuse et addictive portée par un ancien d’Urgences et révélatrice des dysfonctionnements de la société américaine. Alors que la saison 2 vient de débuter sur HBO Max, depuis le 9 janvier 2026, on vous explique pourquoi il est grand temps de vous y mettre. 

  •  

The Pitt est la meilleure série médicale depuis Urgences (et vous ne la regardez pas encore)

Quand HBO s’intéresse enfin au genre médical, cela donne The Pitt, une série nerveuse et addictive portée par un ancien d’Urgences et révélatrice des dysfonctionnements de la société américaine. Alors que la saison 2 vient de débuter sur HBO Max, depuis le 9 janvier 2026, on vous explique pourquoi il est grand temps de vous y mettre. 

  •  

Why you should embrace rejection

From building resilience to boosting artistic creativity, there are unexpected benefits to being rebuffed

Rejection hurts. Whether in a professional, social or romantic setting, there is a particularly painful sting to the discovery that one has been judged undesirable in some way. If you have ever experienced proper rejection – and that would be most of us – it may stand out in your mind for a long time, like a boulder lodged in the landscape of memory.

And it can hurt literally. The late anthropologist Helen Fisher, who studied human behaviour in the context of romantic love, showed that rejection and physical injury have much in common. In 2010 she led a study of people who had been recently rejected romantically. Functional MRI scans of their brains revealed that areas associated with distress and physical pain were more active. The passage of time did seem to reduce the pain response for Fisher’s participants, but for some people rejection can resonate for months or years. This overlap in the brain’s response to what we think of as physical and mental pain isn’t limited to romance. Social psychologist Naomi Eisenberger scanned the brains of people who were socially excluded from a ballgame in an experiment. Her results showed that “social pain is analogous in its neurocognitive function to physical pain, alerting us when we have sustained injury to our social connections”.

Continue reading...

© Illustration: Elia Barbieri/The Guardian

© Illustration: Elia Barbieri/The Guardian

© Illustration: Elia Barbieri/The Guardian

  •  

On a joué à Highguard : le FPS free-to-play qui ressemble encore à une bêta

Porté par des ambitions démesurées, Highguard visait à devenir le prochain FPS compétitif capable de tourner sur un large éventail de machines. Mais après plusieurs heures de jeu, force est de constater qu’il ressemble davantage, pour l’instant, à une leçon grandeur nature pour ses développeurs qu’à une véritable référence du genre.

  •  

On a joué à Highguard : le FPS free-to-play qui ressemble encore à une bêta

Porté par des ambitions démesurées, Highguard visait à devenir le prochain FPS compétitif capable de tourner sur un large éventail de machines. Mais après plusieurs heures de jeu, force est de constater qu’il ressemble davantage, pour l’instant, à une leçon grandeur nature pour ses développeurs qu’à une véritable référence du genre.

  •  

Milli Vanilli’s Fab Morvan on his lip-syncing downfall and Grammys comeback: ‘The truth will set you free’

Three decades after having his Grammy rescinded as part of the notorious duo, he is a nominee once more, for the audiobook of his unflinching memoir. ‘I had to tell my story,’ he says

It may not be the most auspicious way to start an interview, but I have to ask: Fab, is it you reading your audiobook? Please confirm you aren’t just a pretty face hired to front it?

Fabrice Maxime Sylvain Morvan considers my question, then laughs. I’m teasing: it definitely is Morvan narrating You Know It’s True: The Real Story of Milli Vanilli. But as the recording of his book has been nominated for best audiobook, narration and storytelling recording at the 2026 Grammy awards – and Milli Vanilli are the only winners to have had their Grammy (given in 1990 for best new artist) rescinded, due to the revelation that the duo didn’t sing on their records – I do need confirmation.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Jonas Ernst

© Photograph: Jonas Ernst

© Photograph: Jonas Ernst

  •  

How Nicki Minaj went from Queen of Rap to Trump cheerleader

Once the unassailable ‘Queen of Rap,’ Nicki Minaj has grown increasingly estranged from the music industry — and embraced by conservatives — culminating in a public show of support for Donald Trump that stunned fans. Carsen Holaday traces the controversies, feuds and fan backlash that reshaped her career

© Getty Images

  •  

‘I’m loving this era I’ve been thrust into’: Denise Welch on depression, daytime TV and her dramatic renaissance

She’s gone from ‘queen of the soaps’ to Loose Woman known for her outspoken opinions and rockstar son Matty Healy. Now sober, she is enjoying another reinvention

Denise Welch doesn’t seem the kind of woman who would turn up with an entourage. But here she is having her hair primped in a makeshift changing room by two people. One tickling her fringe, the other tweaking her tufts. Blimey, I say, have you got two assistants? She grins. “No. There are three.” And now it turns out she’s got a fourth. I offer to make her a cup of coffee. She warns me she’s fussy. “Three teaspoons of Coffee-Mate, please.”

Welch is having a moment. She calls it, with a fabulously camp flourish, her renaissance. The actor and Loose Women regular has hardly been invisible in recent years. But this is on another level. For most of the 2000s, she has been best known for dishing out blithe opinions about anything and everything, and being the mother of the 1975’s frontman, Matty Healy. Now, though, it’s the acting that’s getting the attention. Earlier this month, she returned to the drama series Waterloo Road as the hopeless French teacher Steph Haydock after a 15‑year absence. This time around, she’s a supply teacher and is even more hopeless. Welch has also got parts in the new Russell T Davies drama series Tip Toe, the Josh Pugh sitcom Stepping Up, both on Channel 4, and the adaptation of Graham Norton’s novel Forever Home.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: David Titlow/The Guardian

© Photograph: David Titlow/The Guardian

© Photograph: David Titlow/The Guardian

  •  
❌