Going out: Cinema

    Normal
    Out now
    Ben Wheatley (Sightseers) returns with an action crime thriller starring Bob Odenkirk as a man serving as interim sheriff in the fictional little town of Normal, Minnesota, a place that turns out to have some unexpectedly big secrets involving the yakuza. Also starring Henry Winkler and Lena Headey.

    Obsession
    Out now
    In this literal “be careful what you wish for” horror movie, Bear works in a music store and has a crush on co-worker Nikki. When given the opportunity he makes a magical wish for her to love him more than anyone else in the world, leading to an extreme version of the condition mentioned in the title.
    Orphan
    Out now
    Set in the aftermath of the failed 1956 revolution in Budapest, an angry young teenager, Andor (Bojtorján Barabas), is raised on idealistic stories of his missing father, but struggles with family secrets when a man appears claiming to be him – and falls far short of the image in Andor’s head. Historical drama from director László Nemes (Son of Saul).

    The Christophers
    Out now
    Director Steven Soderbergh teams up with Ian McKellen and Michaela Coel for an art world caper in which the two unscrupulous adult children of a highly acclaimed elderly artist hire a younger artist to finish off some of his incomplete paintings – so that they can be sold off as the genuine article. Catherine Bray

    Going out: GigsMore than a feline … Doja Cat.

    Doja Cat
    19 to 29 May, tour starts Dublin
    While last year’s sleek funk-pop opus Vie hasn’t hit the commercial peaks of the LA rapper and singer’s previous output, Doja Cat still knows how to put on an eye-popping show. Expect 27 songs, high-cut leopard print leotards and a provocativeperformer taking cues from 80s superstars such asPrince and Janet Jackson. Michael Cragg

    Get Together
    Various venues, Sheffield, 16 May
    Southend goth overlords the Horrors join the likes of Welsh-Cornish wonder Gwenno and Hot Chip’s Alexis Taylor feature in this city-wide festival. Other highlights include “wonk pop” practitioners Lime Garden and London-based noise merchants Factory Floor. Michael Cragg

    Tosca
    Glyndebourne, nr Lewes, 21 May to 22 June & 4 to 30 August
    The UK’s premier summer opera festival opens with its first ever production of Puccini’s classic thriller. Staged by US director Ted Huffman in Glyndebourne’s exquisitely intimate theatre, this Tosca promises to be up close and personal. Robin Ticciati conducts, with soprano Caitlin Gotimer leading two rising-star casts. Flora Willson

    Submotion Orchestra
    The Wardrobe, Leeds, 21 May
    Leeds jazz festival’s fifth year boasts genre-fluid pianist-organist Kit Downes (25 May) and sax star Emma Rawicz (24 May) among the luminaries of its six-day run. The now 16-year-old Submotion Orchestra’s fusion of electronica, jazz and soulful ambience will be a big highlight of the opening-night gigs. John Fordham

    Going out: ArtGodfried Donkor’s St Ike Quartey, 2023. Photograph: Godfried Donkor/Gallery 1957

    Godfried Donkor
    Firstsite, Colchester, 22 May to 30 August
    Travel from Colchester to west Africa and the Caribbean as this London-based Ghanaian artist weaves together stories of resistance from Boudicca to Yaa Asantewaa. Donkor mixes collage, painting and textile to talk about how identity, power and trade shape our world.

    Delcy Morelos
    Barbican, London, to 31 July
    This Colombian installation artist is making a big muddy mess, filling the Barbican with huge mounds of earth. Morelos uses soil, clay and spices to totally transform spaces into heady immersive environments, inviting viewers to contemplate mud as the very material of life, all based on ideas gleaned from ancestral Andean and Amazonian knowledge.

    Phantasmagoria
    Henry Moore Institute, Leeds, to 30 August
    Video games and digital art aren’t necessarily what you’d associate with a gallery named after Britain’s most famous sculptor, but this exhibition deals with some seriously traditional subject matter: folklore, the occult and witchcraft. Artists including Most Dismal Swamp and the brilliant Joey Holder will drag enchantment, myth and magic into the present day.

    James McNeill Whistler
    Tate Britain, London, 21 May to 27 September
    Tate Britain’s major summer show is the biggest European exhibition of this US painter’s work for more than 30 years. Whistler created some of the most instantly recognisable images of the 19th century: perfectly poised portraits, hauntingly penumbral landscapes, austere images of his own family, all with a haunting, innovative approach to painting. Eddy Frankel

    Going out: StageOn the box … Ania Magaliano. Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The Observer

    Ania Magliano
    21 May to 15 November; tour starts Reading
    She was already a rising star but being cast in SNL has cemented Magliano’s place in the comedy firmament. Now the 28-year-old is hitting the road with Peach Fuzz, a show inspired by her newfound connection to her body and inability to relate to Sabrina Carpenter. Rachel Aroesti

    Mother Courage and Her Children
    Shakespeare’s Globe, London, to 27 June
    The Globe’s artistic director and powerhouse performer, Michelle Terry, stars as Mother Courage, dragging her cart through a wasteland ravaged by war. Anna Jordan adapts a modern staging of Brecht’s defiant protest play. Miriam Gillinson

    Little Shop of Horrors
    Northern Stage, Newcastle upon Tyne, to 23 May; touring to 20 June
    A new actor-musician production of Alan Menken and Howard Ashman’s cult hit, with Amena El-Kindy as Audrey and Kristian Cunningham as Seymour, the flower shop assistant who stumbles across a truly monster plant – feeeeeeed me! MG

    Uncaged+
    The Mount Without, Bristol, 18 to 22 May
    A coup for the Bristol dance venue, a guest performance from former Royal Ballet principal Edward Watson (18 & 19 May only) in works by choreographer Antonia Franceschi (ex-New York City Ballet, best known as the ballet dancer in the movie Fame). The venue itself is worth a visit, it’s a beautiful church conversion. Lyndsey Winship

    Staying in: StreamingHorsing around … Lu Richardson and Emilia Clarke in Ponies. Photograph: Katalin Vermes/Peacock

    Ponies
    Sky Atlantic & Now, 22 May, 9pm
    Haley Lu Richardson (The White Lotus) and Emilia Clarke (Game of Thrones) are two bereaved wives who take over their late husbands’ jobs as CIA spies in Soviet Moscow in a 1970s-set cold war thriller that doubles as a goofy buddy comedy. Adrian Lester co-stars as their handler.

    The Boroughs
    Netflix, 21 May
    A new supernatural horror set in a retirement community where a malign entity is attempting to steal “time”. Cue wisecracks about how little the residents have left anyway, despite the stellar cast – Bill Pullman, Geena Davis, Alfred Molina – looking far too sprightly for such gags to land.

    Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed
    Apple TV+, 20 May
    From Euphoria to Margo’s Got Money Troubles, online sex work is TV’s current fixation, but this thriller takes a slightly different angle. She-Hulk’s Tatiana Maslany stars as divorced mother Paula who strikes up a rapport with a “cam boy” whose attempt to scam her results in murder.

    Falling
    Channel 4, 19 May, 9pm
    Remember Fleabag’s hot priest? Well now we’re getting a hot priest and a hot nun courtesy of prolific screenwriter Jack Thorne. Keeley Hawes leads as the latter, whose romantic feelings for Paapa Essiedu’s man of the cloth leads them both into temptation. RA

    Staying in: GamesCapers … Lego Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight. Illustration: TT Games/Warner Bros

    Lego Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight
    PC,PS5, Xbox, Switch 2; out 22 May
    The caped crusader is back in Lego form as we follow the origins of the character, from newbie to Gotham legend. We’re promised a vast explorable city, a fresh, high-impact combat system and some classic foes.

    Forza Horizon 6
    PC, Xbox; out 19 May
    The globe-trotting open-world racer returns, this time taking its fleet of exotic cars to Japan, where neon cities and Ghibli-esque rural landscapes provide the backdrop to an array of circuits and challenges. Keith Stuart

    Staying in: AlbumsOriginal pirate material … Genesis Owusu. Photograph: Isaac Brown

    Genesis Owusu – Redstar Wu & the Worldwide Scourge
    Out now
    Released last September, Pirate Radio, the lead single from the third album by the Ghanaian-Australian rapper and singer, is a coiled spring of anger, aiming barbs at Elon Musk and Kanye. Its furious melding of punk and synthpop also permeates the galloping recent single Stampede.

    Dua Saleh – Of Earth & Wires
    Out now
    The LA based, Sudanese-American polymath – as well as writing poetry, Saleh got their break playing Cal in Sex Education – returns with this lush second album. Bon Iver adds his quivering croon to Flood, while I Do, I Do fuses alt-R&B and Sudanese folk.

    Drake – Iceman
    Out now
    Having survived Kendrick Lamar’s eviscerating takedown Not Like Us, Drake returns with his first solo album in three years. Originally teased back in 2024, then again in 2025, its release date was eventually confirmed via a giant melting ice sculpture in Toronto.

    Rostam – American Stories
    Out now
    The erstwhile Vampire Weekender and producer for Haim and Clairo returns to his solo career with this follow-up to 2021’s Changephobia. Celebrating his Persian roots, alongside elements of Americana, it stretches out like a perfect road trip. MC

    Staying in: Brain foodSpace man … Daniel Kaluuya. Photograph: Tristan Fewings/Getty/Red Sea International Film Festival

    Making Space
    Podcast
    North London’s Roundhouse venue presents this enlightening series of conversations featuring guests such as the actor Daniel Kaluuya on the value of youth programmes, and former youth poet laureate Cecilia Knapp on exploring authentic human stories.

    Five By Nine
    YouTube
    This design-focused YouTube channel posts engaging and clearly written guides to improving your home layout and colour palette. Its video The Psychology Behind Why Some Homes Feel Good But Most Don’t is a key primer.

    The Black Power Station
    BBC Sounds, 21 May
    Luthando Zingela’s delightfully uplifting documentary journeys into an abandoned power station in South Africa that has been transformed into a makeshift musical hub. Ammar Kalia

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