
The Narrow Road to the Deep North first look review – Jacob Elordi's war epic is big, bold and deeply pleasurable
The story operates in three phases: before, during and after the second world war. Jacob Elordi is Dorrigo Evans, an Australian medical student about to ship out, engaged to a beautiful woman from a wealthy family – but he has a passionate affair with Amy (Odessa Young), the younger second wife of his uncle Keith (Simon Baker).
During the war, he is captured by the Japanese and forced to work on the Burma railway – beaten, brutalised and tortured like all the rest. After the war, as an older man in 1989, Dorrigo is played by Ciarán Hinds; he has become a celebrated surgeon living in a handsome modernist house and a spokesperson for his generation of ex-servicemen. He is shown exploding with rage at a young journalist who suggests that what the Japanese suffered at Hiroshima and Nagasaki more than cancels what they did to Allied PoWs on the Burma railway.
What is interesting here is not that all the drama – of Dorrigo's relationship with Amy, of the war itself – happened in the past, while the present is a matter of bittersweet memories and a placidly married Dorrigo not talking to his wife Ella (Heather Mitchell) about a lifetime of lies and guilt. No: dramatic and transgressive things are happening right now. Older Dorrigo is having a passionate affair with Lynette (Essie Davis), the wife of a surgeon colleague, and who's to say if that liaison is not every bit as meaningful as the one transfigured by the wartime past? Perhaps what the war has taught Dorrigo is to grab moments of sensual pleasure when you can.
The drama indirectly discloses mysteries which underpin events: Dorrigo's unreflective Uncle Keith (an unassumingly good performance from Simon Baker) seems very relaxed about letting his nephew spend quality time with the young second wife he took soon after the death of his first. Is it because he himself feels guilt? That he senses Amy is dissatisfied and is prepared to turn a blind eye to a connection with the nephew he thinks may well die in the war? And what are Dorrigo's feelings about that or anything else? Both Elordi's younger and Hinds's older Dorrigo are opaque – as the older man testily explains to the young journalist: feelings were not as fashionable in the 40s as they are now. And perhaps feelings are what got scorched away by the violence of war.
Any drama with this subject and these scenes – the brutality of the work camps, the terrible poignancy of the PoWs taking a delusional pride in their enforced labour, the muster parades of emaciated men, the confrontations between western and Japanese officers – inevitably brings back memories of a classic like David Lean's The Bridge on the River Kwai (even the title of this has, I suspect, a tiny echo). Perhaps the key horrible sequence is the hint of friendship between Dorrigo and the relatively kindly Maj Nakamura (Shô Kasamatsu), who then tactlessly reveals to his commanding officer Col Kota (Taki Abe) that he has been almost fraternising with him. Coolly, Kota asks the Major if he has ever beheaded a man, an experience he suggests should be a rite of passage for a Japanese warrior. He orders one shivering Australian captive to kneel in front of him, the increasingly uneasy Major and the rest of the prisoners – just to demonstrate the stance with the sword, just a theoretical test, he assures everyone.
Kurzel handles the material with confidence and storytelling verve and gets fervent, focused performances from Elordi, Hinds and Young.
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Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Tim Minchin: 'Mum's death was gutting as she'll never see my kids grow up'
Comedian and singer-songwriter Tim Minchin opens up about his family, the loss of his beloved mum Ros to blood cancer, and why he never reads his own reviews It's been 20 years since Australian comedian Tim Minchin first registered on British radars with his award-winning Edinburgh show Darkside, a mix of comedy songs, political jokes and poignant, witty reflections on his own life, all played barefoot at his piano. Since then the Northampton-born musician has written and starred in the Netflix drama Upright, released six albums of his work and created the critically acclaimed musical Matilda - inspired by the Roald Dahl book - which, in 2025, celebrates 15 years of West End success. It has won seven Olivier awards and four Tonys and is about to start a second UK and Ireland tour with a new cast. Now about to turn 50, and having re-recorded an album of his old songs, Tim is in a reflective mood. While he is tired after finishing a 33-gig UK tour this summer, he feels happier than ever getting to do what he loves. But the last two years have had challenges. Tim lost his mum Ros in 2023 after a three-year battle with blood cancer. He performed in Sydney hours after she died, having spent as much time with her as he could in her final months. "I'm a deeply pragmatic person, I'm quite emotionally intelligent and I'm a reasonable observer of both my own and other people's emotions, so your mum dies, and that's like one of the rules," he says. "If you're lucky, she goes before you. If she dies at 74 like mine, we're lucky to have had her that long. "But sometimes I feel like she's missing all of this, as she would have loved to see her grandkids getting older. " He laughingly describes his children, Violet and Caspar as "pretty different and cats, my kids". The teenagers, who he shares with childhood sweetheart Sarah, feature in some of his songs - Lullaby, which he wrote when Violet was a sleep-dodging baby, carries the immortal line, 'When is rocking rocking, and when is it shaking?' "We really struggled with her. She liked being rocked, but it was like, 'is this alright? I'm throwing this kid around,'" he laughs. Family is so important to Tim, who lives with wife Sarah in Sydney when he's not travelling. His dad David came to the UK for Tim's recent tour and the Minchins have a novel way of keeping in touch: by reporting their daily exercise to each other. "Although Dad's been grieving, he's also been like, well, I don't have long, I'd better travel," says Tim. "We're very close, my family, my three siblings and me. We are all talking, all the time." When he's not writing new lyrics or recording - his new album TimMinchinTimeMachine is a look back at 20 years' worth of his favourite songs - Tim stays off social media and 24-hour news. "I was on Twitter in the early days, and I think once some troll said something, and I slapped them down," he recalls. "And all my fans piled on this person and I just went, 'I will never do that again'. "I can't believe that in 2025, people still set their dogs on each other. After Trump and Brexit happened, I got out of Twitter, I just went, 'this is horrible, toxic'. Now I'm off everything. I had to go cold turkey, I was completely addicted." In his free time, Tim reads books and checks the news every three days or so to keep away from the dreaded doomscrolling. "It's this perpetual humankind panic, as if none of this stuff's ever happened before. I can't be happy and have all that stuff [in my head]. Now I'm trying to teach my kids the same thing," he says. The same mentality extends to his critics - he refuses to read reviews of shows, knowing a single criticism would make him spiral. "I'm just too fragile. And I'm not ashamed of that - you have to be, to do what I do. You have to be open-hearted," he says. "I have confidence in my work now. A long time ago I thought, 'who do I listen to? I'm not like anyone else.' [Anything I read about myself ] is in my head the next day when I go on stage. And that's just no good to me, because to do what I do requires a massive leap, almost like a suspension of disbelief. "The person that I am when I walk on stage is a person completely confident, to have up to 7,000 people hanging on my every word," he says. "And that is not who I always feel like. Sometimes it feels impossible."


Scotsman
3 hours ago
- Scotsman
Edinburgh Fringe Comedy reviews: Emma Holland
Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Emma Holland: Don't Touch My Trinkets ★★★★☆ Assembly George Square Studios (Venue 17) until 24 August From the elaborate, extended silliness of her walk-on, Emma Holland's latest show is an overwhelmingly successful attempt at wrongfooting and delighting the audience. A series of little tricks and cons, rather like the magic she so despises. But it's also testimony to the power of art to tell a story. Instilled in her by a childhood visit to the Capitoline Museums in Rome and the dressing down she received whilst there for touching a piece, the Australian comic has revered art ever since. Emma Holland: Don't Touch My Trinkets | Contributed Don't Touch My Trinkets is a true multi-media arrangement, with Holland relating her story through four works she's created commemorating emotive points in her life. Further incorporating a screen and abundant sound cues, it's a rich and layered confection that starts to speak to the question of what art is for, even as Holland consistently rug-pulls and feigns sincerity. And while it touches on the morality of absorbing and exploiting others' stories and experiences for commercial gain and power, it's chiefly spoofing the look-at-me supremacy of the artist's ego. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Holland is by turns goofy, charming and thunderously vexed, frustrated by her nemeses. Yet you rarely get a sense of lingering anguish; she's too openly manipulative and prioritising of the laugh for that. Previous shows have seen her be more personable, seeking to forge connections with the audience. Here, she only affects to do that, skewering the artistic need to control everything and bulldozing through her intricately plotted presentation, a little crazed and wild-eyed. The show is weighty, with a wide variety of jokes that foreshadow and hark back to others. And it's well paced too, with quickie, almost subliminal, gags slipped in on occasion and others left to simmer, and be savoured, for longer. Though she often pretends otherwise, Holland is an act in absolute mastery of her craft. JAY RICHARDSON Jodie Sloan: Is She Hot? ★★★☆☆ Pleasance Courtyard (Venue 33) until 24 August A compelling reclaiming of personal narrative, Jodie Sloan's Fringe debut begins with a dark disclaimer, tempering her not entirely unfounded claim to be the Taylor Swift of comedy. At best dismissed as 'cute and sexy and Canadian', at worst the ukulele-playing comic who became a case study in what happens when a Gen Z performer has the glare of the internet's judgement shone upon them. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Jodie Sloan: Is She Hot? | Lexi Murrant She opens with the catchy, gently witty song with which she went viral, Is He Hot?, having attracted more than five million views on TikTok. A follow-up female version attracted a further million. Yet for reasons best know to the capricious algorithms of the shadowy Chinese military app, TikTok then effectively turned her into a survey, soliciting viewers to rate her personal hotness. Having been bombarded with attention and abuse from trolls, she retreated to the relatively safe space of her pre-teen diaries, finding little consolation in the family trauma she dug up. After arriving in Scotland by way of Australia, Sloan has an assurance and steeliness that belies her 28 years and circumstances, with her tale also encompassing grief, massive insecurities and a realignment of her sexuality. She's come out the other side stronger, a flourishing songwriter who can capably mix the comic with the bleak. JAY RICHARDSON Kathy Maniura: The Cycling Man ★★★☆☆ Pleasance Courtyard (Venue 33) until 24 August Devoting a full hour to her most established creation, 'The Cycling Man', leftfield character comic and drag king Kathy Maniura fleshes out the backstory of the lycra-clad boor at his lowest ebb. Recently separated from his long-suffering wife, oblivious snob Oliver Greaves crashes his beloved bike and wakes up in an emergency room. Demanding attention, the posh, vainglorious fool abuses the captivity of his audience to acquaint them with his achievements, not least the epiphany of when he joined his North London cycling club of fellow middle-aged braggarts on wheels. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad As a portrait of a certain kind of posh, absurdly puffed-up man, out of touch with emotions and family, Oliver is a grotesque caricature. Even as his world collapses around him, he perceives the wreck of his marriage through graphs and management jargon, finding his safe space wrapped in the Financial Times. With his character largely established in his unwitting testimony, the extent of his self-awareness is a little inconsistent. His redemption arc is overlong. And a conceit of using a GoPro camera strapped to his helmet to supplement his direct address is only partially successful. Still, Maniura understatedly makes some satirical points about class and gender and she imbues him with a pathos he doesn't deserve. JAY RICHARDSON Max Fulham: Full of Ham ★★★☆☆ Pleasance Courtyard (Venue 33) until 25 August Max Fulham fully appreciates that ventriloquism retains some creaky throwback, end-of-the-pier associations. And he's not above indulging some of these musichall aspects, not least in the polished skill with which he brings his puppets to life, and the boyish amiability with which he seeks to entertain. Updating the art to the 21st century, with similarly tidy sound cues and prop-based interaction, he's a solid rather than spectacular comedian however. Attesting to his relative youth, he introduces the puppet that got him into venting as a nine-year-old by shamelessly playing up the sentimentality of its formative importance. 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In the entertainingly recognisable picture she paints of how such a relative behaves at a wedding, she sets out what a good time we're going to have with her in Busy Body. In a dark little room brightened up with flowers and patterned fabric, Annette is a breath of fresh air, dipping in and out of observations on everything from popular culture to childhood interests that had her labelled as an 'old soul'. Along the way we're treated to some nice material about the Earl of Sandwich and the darker context of his lunchtime legacy, the way she geekily quoted a Shakespeare sonnet during a sexual encounter and an academic study that aimed to justify why men can't see things domestically. In an hour that skips along happily, she also muses upon becoming British (she's half-Canadian, half-American) enough to know that Jane is the one with the 'sad little life' and to be able to provide a cultural analysis of Mr Blobby, as well as touching upon ideas of body image and which contemporary pop star would be a World War II collaborator. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad You can take anyone to this show and they'll have a lovely time. ASHLEY DAVIES Oh God, Not Another Bloody Sonnet Show ★★★☆☆ Carbon (Venue 180), run ended Let us make no bones about it, I am, and have always been, a huge fan of Peter Buckley Hill. And tonight I have the absolute privilege of having him all to myself because the rest of you are too dim to realise what you are missing. Sonnets. That is what. Many sonnets, and all written by the man himself. Not the Shakespeare man (I was never as much of a fan of his). Peter's are sometimes dad-joke funny, sometimes truly poignant, often tremendously witty, and always impressive. There is darkness and there is pure silliness. There is anger, there is even death. And when he gets his poetical teeth into war, he will take your breath away. If you are lucky, he will share some of the works that have not yet made their appearance online. In case the sonnet form starts to do your head in, he will burst forth into a neuron-refreshing selection of his popular comic songs. And so... There was an old man who wrote sonnets No topic lacked one upon it Way funnier than Will And it's free, there's no bill He's there every night if you wannit KATE COPSTICK


Scottish Sun
4 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Oisin Murphy can bang in my big 7-1 tip on day three of the York Ebor Festival
Blink and you might miss the big race MATT CHAPMAN Oisin Murphy can bang in my big 7-1 tip on day three of the York Ebor Festival Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) G'Day mate. It's time for some Aussie fun at York on Friday. It's all about speedsters on the Knavesmire and Australian raider ASFOORA has every chance of going three places better than last year when she was fourth behind Bradsell in the Group 1 Coolmore Wootton Bassett Nunthorpe Stakes. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 1 Chappers fancies the raider from Down Under to strike gold at York on Friday Credit: Getty It promises to be a belting renewal, with the usual suspects joined by a splash of juvenile challengers in Lady Iman and Spicy Marg. Those youngsters carry just 8st 2lb, and try and take the dash like and other two-year-olds have done like High Treason (1953), My Beau (1953), Ennis (1956), Lyric Fantasy (1992) and Kingsgate Native (2007). The day three feature is a wide open and fascinating renewal. The juveniles do get a big weight advantage, but this is a different ball game for all of them. ASFOORA is the each-way play for me. My Henry Dwyer-trained raider hasn't been at her best recently, finishing fifth to American Affair in the Group 1 King Charles III Stakes at Royal Ascot and then seventh in the King George Qatar Stakes at Glorious Goodwood when the easy ground would have been a big negative. All accounts suggest she is working well and as a former King Charles winner she's bang in the mix class-wise. She's the one for me under Oisin Murphy. The Nunthorpe is the highlight on ITV, but there are four other races on the show starting with a handicap over 1m4f. This race is lacking pace. For that reason, I'm going for a turn up in INSANITY, who can lead or go close to the pace if one of the big priced runners goes to the front. Insanity won well at Ayr earlier in the season and wasn't totally disgraced when third at Ascot last time. He's up 1lb for that effort but his mark of 97 is workable. Up in class next for the Group 2 Lonsdale Cup over an extended 2m. This should be simple for Ascot Gold Cup hero TRAWLERMAN, who can make all under William Buick for John & Thady Gosden. The Godolphin front-runner has to give 3lb and more away, but he's just better than this lot and should shrug off any pace pressure from Al Qareem. Sweet William might be the danger. A big race for the juveniles in the Group 2 Gimcrack for colts over 6f. A huge chance for DO OR DO NOT who has no excuses in this for Ed Walker and Tom Marquand. First time cheekpieces are added to a maiden who has banged his head against the door in being placed here, in the Coventry, in the July Stakes and last time when third to Zavateri in the Group 2 Vintage. He is arguably the best maiden in the country who has run a few times. Finally, a handicap for fillies and mares over an extended 1m2f. WONDER STAR might be ahead of the handicapper for William Haggas and Tom Marquand. The daughter of Sea the Stars went handicapping at Goodwood last time off a mark of 82 and ran a cracking second in a biggish field. She's up 2lb for that but I suspect it won't stop her! Good luck! FREE BETS - GET THE BEST SIGN UP DEALS AND RACING OFFERS Commercial content notice: Taking one of the offers featured in this article may result in a payment to The Sun. You should be aware brands pay fees to appear in the highest placements on the page. 18+. T&Cs apply. Remember to gamble responsibly A responsible gambler is someone who: Establishes time and monetary limits before playing Only gambles with money they can afford to lose Never chases their losses Doesn't gamble if they're upset, angry or depressed Gamcare – Gamble Aware – Find our detailed guide on responsible gambling practices here.