Ken Loach's Palme d'Or win was another triumph for the Cannes boys club
German comedy Toni Erdmann should have won the prize, but no female filmmaker has ever won the Palme d'Or outright
German comedy Toni Erdmann should have won the prize, but no female filmmaker has ever won the Palme d'Or outright
Please send your letters to letters@independent.co.uk
Norbert Hofer's defeat in Austria will not quell far-right extremism, because the genie is out of the nationalist bottle
When it comes to outmoded language it is our ability to discern context and intent, not our sensibilities that are under attack
The Leave campaign has made a great deal of noise about the fact that the misleading figure £350m a week could be spent on the NHS if we were to leave the EU, but they seem to have got some of their facts very wrong
Dr Strydom died of apparent altitude sickness after reaching the mountain’s summit
<p>Young British designers are increasingly coupling with centuries-old brands in an unlikely fusion of hitherto dusty heritage and the strikingly contemporary. It’s a mutually beneficial marriage, and proof opposites can prove very attractive, says Alexander Fury</p>
We want to live at the speed of computers, then we cry like babies when we're treated like numbers and code
Get ready for the beach or pool with fashion-forward swimwear
The Central and Victoria line will begin an all-night service in August 2016
From the moment Joe Penhall's play was premiered back in 2000, it was obvious that here we have a contemporary classic. Matthew Xia's remarkably vibrant and punchily performed revival reinforces that view. The links between ethnicity and perceptions of mental illness, the politics of healthcare in a cash-strapped NHS and the sometimes career-conscious subjectivity of diagnosis – these are amongst the issues thrown up by Penhall's taut three-hander. To get to Xia 's production, the audience has to... Читать дальше...