Richard Hartley

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Mrs America depicts one of feminism’s toughest battles – the fight against female misogynists

From Gloria Steinem to Shirley Chisholm, there were some brilliant women pushing for equal rights in the 1970s. In Phyllis Schlafly, they found a formidable foe, says Guardian columnist Suzanne Moore

‘Cute but cruel’: the crime drama hailed a Chinese TV milestone

Hidden Corner has rapidly become one of the country’s most discussed and watched shows

Brave New World: London reimagined after a disaster

A firm of architects had fun designing a dystopian version of the capital for a drama based on Aldous Huxley’s classic starring Demi Moore

TV tonight: how prison can rehabilitate rather than just punish

A timely documentary looks at US prisoners, many of whom are from BAME communities, working to get degrees while incarcerated. Plus: Michaela Coel’s rollercoaster ride continues. Here’s what to watch this evening

How to watch police shows in the age of Black Lives Matter

The crime genre glorifies police violence but should we ban such shows, or reappraise them with a critical eye, asks Elias Rodriques, a PhD student and novelist

Claes Bang: ‘I’ve been watching a great Danish show … what was it called?’

The Dracula star talks about filming on Zoom, if he could play Bond and the only Kubrick film he’s never seen

Sex, lies and celluloid: how realistic is Netflix’s drama Hollywood?

It’s got orgies, arrests, scandals and eccentrics. But is the central story – about gay and black people triumphing in 1940s Tinseltown – realistic? We sift the ugly facts from glossy fiction

This week’s best culture, at home – from Korean ballet to a David Nicholls-inspired radio play

The Observer’s critics recommend the best new arts shows to enjoy on TV, on the radio and online

Himesh Patel: ‘It felt odd making a show about a pandemic’

The former EastEnders actor talks about shooting a pilot on a deadly virus, telling British stories with a difference – and how playing a bit part as a pigeon changed his career

How 1968 TV drama The Year of the Sex Olympics predicted our world

The desensitising effects of porn, the invasive voyeurism of reality TV, the passivity of mass consumerism … Nigel Kneale’s programme anticipated them all

Covid-19 leaves news and entertainment industries reeling

TV audiences are at Christmas levels, and news website figures sky high, but with few ads or new shows there are fears for the future

Twin Peaks at 30: some damn fine outfits but what do they mean?

It’s three decades since David Lynch’s groundbreaking TV show hit our screens, and the character’s clothes have aged as well as the drama

What I’m really watching: living room comedy and upscale junk food

Our series on viewing habits in self-isolation continues with David Brent-esque comedian Alistair Green and tasty YouTube treats courtesy of Bon Appetit

Emmerdale and Aliens actor Jay Benedict dies of coronavirus

American-born actor also appeared in Foyle’s War and The Dark Knight Rises

BBC drama head Piers Wenger: ‘We want to show black British talent doesn’t have to go to the USA’

Coronavirus might have stopped dramas like Line of Duty in their tracks, but with Small Axe, Us and Normal People, Wenger is pressing on – ignoring critics who claim his shows are too ‘woke’

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About

  • About Richard Hartley
  • Richard Hartley’s Work
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Film & Tech News

  • Canadian mother sues OpenAI, alleging ChatGPT led her daughter to kill herself
  • The Guardian view on the analogue resurgence: the shock of the old
  • Helen Mirren speaks out about being called ‘evil Zionist’ on the street in London
  • Musk’s xAI fired engineer for raising concerns about Grok chatbot, lawsuit claims
  • SpaceX heads for record $1.78tn float amid fears it is overvalued
  • Playing with payphones: how the ubiquitous orange booths have been gamified by fans
  • Cassette tapes were the voice notes of my youth, bringing tales from the diaspora to our living room
  • ‘I’m not bad, I’m just drawn that way’: Kathleen Turner’s best films – ranked!
  • AI wealth boom sending San Francisco home prices surging: ‘It’s ridiculous’
  • ‘This is honest art. Like Dostoevsky’: Tim Allen and Tom Hanks on Toy Story 5, tech peril and the joy of rusty nails
  • AI absolutism is breaking our brains. The apocalyptic future we’re being sold isn’t inevitable
  • ‘Now they can’t afford me’: Steven Spielberg was turned down to direct Bond – twice
  • Who you gonna maul? Why Paul Feig’s derided all-female Ghostbusters dazzles a decade later
  • Stop! That! Train! review – RuPaul-led zany drag comedy is a riot
  • The best robot vacuums in the UK to keep your home clean and dust free, tested
  • Strictly Ballroom review – Baz Luhrmann’s dizzying, dance-tastic swirl of fun is a classic ugly-duckling tale
  • Met police chief calls for law to make stolen phones ‘unusable bricks’
  • ‘They kissed, and the audience roared’: the new musical about gay activists and striking miners
  • French star Patrick Bruel charged with rape and sexual assault
  • Labor to set terms for datacentre and AI growth as it vows not to repeat mistakes of resources boom
  • Dead Poets Society director Peter Weir receives lifetime achievement award at Sydney film festival
  • Stephen Ogilvie’s family appeal for calm on second night of disorder – as it happened
  • Elon Musk’s X not facing action from UK government over posts inciting violence in Belfast
  • Glenn Close and Ridley Scott among names set to receive honorary Oscars
  • The Guardian view on far-right violence: digital radicalisation is threatening democracy
  • Sales of Meta whistleblower’s memoir soar after Hay festival ‘silencing’
  • How to Talk Australians: The Movie review – viral web series lampooning Aussie culture gets big-screen adaptation
  • First trailer for Aaron Sorkin’s Facebook sequel The Social Reckoning
  • Actor Tyler Mane reveals he is having treatment for rare male breast cancer
  • Under the Shadow review – Leila Farzad is fantastic in this nerve-shredding tale of 80s Tehran

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