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Best films of 2025 in the UK so far

Best films of 2025 in the UK so far

The Guardian2 days ago

Adaptation of Colson Whitehead novel is an intensely moving story of two friends trapped in a racist reform school, told with piercing beauty by RaMell Ross.
What we said: 'There are wonderful moments of humanity and hope; I don't usually respond to 'hug' moments in drama: and yet the (soon to be classic) scene here in which a woman has to hug her grandson's friend in the absence of the grandson himself is overwhelming.' Read the full review.
Writer/director/actor Jesse Eisenberg effortlessly walks a tonal tightrope in this film about Jewish American cousins on a Holocaust tour in Poland, with Kieran Culkin stealing the show.
What we said: 'This is an effortlessly witty, fluent and astringent comedy with a very serious overcurrent. It is a road movie which is partly about the Holocaust and about America's third-generation attempt at coming to terms with it, at confronting what their parents and grandparents found too painfully recent to revisit, or necessary to forget in order to survive. And partly it's about family, male friendship and growing older.' Read the full review.
Fictionalised true crime nightmare based on Denmark's 1921 baby-killer case, directed by Magnus von Horn, that leaves a shiver of pure fear.
What we said: 'It is about a world in which women's lives are disposable and in which the authorities are disapproving of and disgusted by their suffering – and set at a time in which the first world war had normalised the idea of mass murder.' Read the full review.
Angelina Jolie's Callas commands the screen in Pablo Larraín's strange and mordant drama that portrays the diva's haughty struggle as her voice begins to fail but her stardom remains undimmed.
What we said: 'Maria is the most persuasive and seductive of Larraín's trilogy of great women at bay, after Jackie about Jackie Kennedy, and Spencer about Princess Diana. There is less sentimentality and self-importance to this one though, for all that it is about the biggest diva in history.​' Read the full review.
Huge and wayward docu-fictional meditation goes inside inside the beautiful mind of Pablo Escobar's hippo, shipped out to furnish the Colombian druglord's estate.
What we said: 'The hippo, as a German tour guide tells us at the very beginning, may look fat and placid and rather cute, but it's fast-moving, aggressive and dangerous to humans; perhaps the film itself, so mysteriously distended with huge digressions and non-narrative scenes, is as exotically fleshy and strange as a hippo. Yet it has bite.' Read the full review.
Maura Delpero's beautifully made drama explores the complex dynamics of a sprawling family in an idyllic Italian village near the wartime border with Germany.
What we said: 'It is wonderfully acted with unaffected naturalism by its cast of professionals and newcomers and plays an extravagant, almost shameless pizzicato on the audience's heartstrings.' Read the full review.
James Mangold's biopic of Bob Dylan follows the rise of the era-defining star with Timothée Chalamet brilliantly embodying his shapeshifting allure.
What we said: 'Chalamet is a hypnotic Dylan, performing the tracks himself and fabricating to a really impressive degree that stoner-hungover birdsong. He does a very passable version of Don't Think Twice, with the distinctive, eccentric intonations, singing as if he's not entirely sure of the tune and appearing to run out of breath at the end of every line.' Read the full review.
Epic postwar architectural drama with Adrien Brody as a Hungarian Holocaust survivor who comes to the US and begins a distinguished career under the patronage of a wealthy man.
What we said: 'This is a film with thrilling directness and storytelling force, a movie that fills its widescreen and three-and-a-half-hour running time with absolute certainty and ease, as well as glorious amplitude, clarity and even simplicity – and yet also with something darkly mysterious and uncanny to be divined in its handsome shape.' Read the full review.
One of Ireland's most important novelists and a woman of fierce intelligence and bravery is celebrated in Sinéad O'Shea's thoroughly enjoyable documentary.
What we said: 'This portrait of the author Edna O'Brien is a reminder that most writers – most people, in fact – don't have lives anywhere near as exciting or fulfilling as hers.' Read the full review.
Marianne Jean-Baptiste is exceptional as a woman in the terrifying endgame of depression in this deeply sober and compassionate drama, a Mike Leigh classic of day-to-day disillusionment and courage.
What we said: 'It reunites Leigh with that overwhelmingly powerful female lead, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, whose name was made by her electrifying performance in Leigh's 1996 film Secrets and Lies, and might well get made all over again with her formidable appearance here, demonstrating the terrible connection between depression and anger.' Read the full review.
Exiled director Mohammad Rasoulof's arresting tale of Iran's violence and paranoia, and officialdom's misogyny and theocracy, whose importance is beyond doubt.
What we said: 'The Seed of the Sacred Fig begins as a downbeat political and domestic drama in the familiar style of Iranian cinema, and then progressively escalates to something extravagantly crazy and traumatised – like a pueblo shootout by Sergio Leone.' Read the full review.
Taut media procedural revisits Munich Olympics in Tim Fehlbaum's tense thriller focusing on the 1972 terrorist massacre through a TV crew lens.
What we said: 'It's a really smart, involving, unassumingly written picture with something of James L Brooks' Broadcast News and I couldn't help think that maybe this is the film that Steven Spielberg could have made rather than Munich, his rather ponderous, Forsythian thriller about the aftermath.' Read the full review.
Mahdi Fleifel's tale of displacement and desperation as Palestinian refugees seek a better life makes for suspenseful, melancholic viewing.
What we said: 'Mahmood Bakri's excellent performance shows Chatila to be smart, personable, manipulative and ruthless, always on the lookout for ways to get money for a fake passport.' Read the full review.
Sarah Snook and Kodi Smit-McPhee lend their voice talents to Adam Elliott's ambitious animation, a charming, poignant tale of troubled twins that has a strong personal touch.
What we said: 'There's an ingenuousness and innocence to Memoir of a Snail, a family-entertainment approachability that belies a strange intensity. There are some candid hints, through the obviously personal narrative touches, that in this film some very real adult pain and anger is being hidden in plain sight.' Read the full review.
Enjoyable and valuable study of tragicomic Britain's inspired photographer, whose highly coloured 70s and 80s images revealed the white working class as never before.
What we said: 'The film shows that part of his skill is just looking like an ordinary bloke, going around in the crowd with his wheeled walking frame (after recent illness), smiling benignly, endlessly taking pictures.' Read the full review.
Inspired by a true story, this feelgood Indian film is about some Bollywood superfans making their own movies with a cheeky but admirable DIY ethos.
What we said: 'There is terrific fun, charm and storytelling energy in Superboys of Malegaon, and it settles on an interesting theme: very rarely indeed does a new film-maker find success with a completely original work.' Read the full review.
Tragic story of a fiercely pioneering photographer, a black South African whose work illuminated the reality of life under apartheid, but who lived a life of exile and homesickness.
What we said: 'Raoul Peck's film, in which LaKeith Stanfield narrates a kind of heightened, fictionalised first-person account from Cole's own writings and diaries, is devastatingly sad. It is the sadness of an artist who becomes estranged, not merely from his homeland, but from his art and his livelihood.' Read the full review.
Laura Carreira's impressive debut drama sees a quietly excellent Joana Santos endure dehumanising work conditions an online warehouse worker while looking for a way out.
What we said: 'On Falling shows us a world of sadness and exhaustion, a kind of heavy cloud cover of depression that is both a symptom of the job and a way of getting through it: only by reducing yourself to zombie-like inattention to your own needs can you get through the day as a 'picker'.' Read the full review.
Mumbai-set comic horror with Radhika Apte terrific as a woman preparing to settle down with a shiftless husband she barely knows when her world goes awry.
What we said: 'With its deadpan drollery and rectilinear tableau scenes, Sister Midnight takes something from Wes Anderson and Jim Jarmusch and also – at its most alarming – something more from Polanski's Repulsion.' Read the full review.
Geoffrey Rush's retired judge is terrorised by John Lithgow's therapy puppet-wielding fellow resident in this claustrophobic care-home thriller of elder-on-elder abuse.
What we said: 'Film-maker James Ashcroft has created a scary and intimately upsetting psychological horror based on a story by New Zealand author Owen Marshall, a film whose coolly maintained claustrophobic mood and bravura performances make up for the slight narrative blurring towards the end.' Read the full review.
Terrifically tense cop movie digs into sexism and caste prejudice in India, Sunita Rajwar and Shahana Goswami as a cynical veteran and a wide-eyed rookie who has inherited her late husband's job.
What we said: 'Writer-director Sandhya Suri has made a tense, violent and politically savvy crime procedural set in India: a film about sexism, caste bigotry and Islamophobia that doubles as a study in the complex relationship between two female cops.' Read the full review.
Tilda Swinton and Michael Shannon go to ground in a survival bunker with their son, in Joshua Oppenheimer's end-of-the-world singalong drama.
What we said: 'What Oppenheimer is doing here commands attention. He is facing something from which everyone, in art as in life, averts their gaze and the resulting film is far better than others notionally on the same subject.' Read the full review.
Docufiction by a group of young film-makers on the spectrum examining how their creativity and sense of self is shaped by autism is funny and pregnant with ideas.
What we said: 'The collective's members finally come together in an empty swimming pool, which becomes their own 'stimming pool', symbolising their collective innovation. It's an intriguing and atmospheric piece of work.' Read the full review.
A collection of staggering TV clips and amazing audio of Lennon and Ono's life in 1970s NYC, Kevin Macdonald's immersive collage is a pop culture fever dream.
What we said: 'It's a film that mixes small screen zeitgeist fragments and madeleine moments, a memory quilt of a certain time and place, juxtaposing Jerry Rubin and Allen Ginsberg with Richard Nixon and George Wallace, John and Yoko in concert with ads for Tupperware.' Read the full review.
Juliette Binoche and Ralph Fiennes star in Uberto Pasolini's raw and urgent Odyssey adaptation, as a traumatised Odysseus faces the shameful aftermath of war.
What we said: 'An elementally violent movie about PTSD, survivor guilt, abandonment, Freudian dysfunction and ruined masculinity.' Read the full review.
Mesmerically peculiar portrait of the band performing in the burning Italian sun in this outrageously indulgent yet vivid and beguiling music documentary.
What we said: 'The music and the atmosphere are an irresistible fan-madeleine for those who can remember referring to them solemnly as 'the Floyd' (ahem).' Read the full review.
Shocking violence is tempered by strange, silent sequences in Dea Kulumbegashvili's haunting abortion drama, which has echoes of The Piano Teacher.
What we said: 'This is not the usual 'abortion' issue movie in which the reactionary anti-abortion authorities are straightforwardly criticised and the pregnant woman is awarded compassionate centre stage status.' Read the full review.
A star player at an elite tennis school decides to stay silent when the head coach is suspended in Leonardo Van Dijl's absorbing movie.
What we said: 'A tense, absorbing movie of silences and absences, of difficult terrain skirted around, of subjects avoided. It's a reminder that in key situations, to keep quiet is a stressful, strenuous and, crucially, public activity – and a survival instinct that many young people have to learn.' Read the full review.
Warm documentary from Dutch film-maker Suzanne Raes following three siblings as they clear out their enormously grand childhood home in Oxfordshire, where among the happy memories are those of cruelty.
What we said: 'Maybe it takes a non-British film-maker to appreciate such intense and unfashionable Englishness; not eccentric exactly, but wayward and romantic.' Read the full review.
Released on his 99th birthday and presented in the context of his remarkable career, Attenborough's passionate case against the ruination of the seas is matched only by nature's grandeur in this visually stunning film.
What we said: 'He shows us an amazing vista of diversity and life, an extraordinary undulating landscape, a giant second planet of whose existence humanity has long been unaware but now seems in danger of damaging or even destroying.' Read the full review.
Nauseating yet gripping story of Nazi poster woman who entranced Hitler, directed Triumph of the Will – and spent the rest of her life alternately fearful and defiant.
What we said: 'This documentary shows she revised her memoirs endlessly, unsure if or how to minimise her personal contact with the Nazis, especially the sinister, besotted Joseph Goebbels; her fear of war guilt was at loggerheads with her unrepentant impulse to proclaim her own prestige.' Read the full review.
Beautiful film of an off-grid family shattered by bereavement who had to come to terms with not just the loss of a parent but a whole lifestyle.
What we said: 'Norwegian film-maker Silje Evensmo Jacobsen tells a painful, complicated story, more complicated than even the film itself explicitly reveals.' Read the full review.
Lily Collias is outstanding as 17-year-old Sam, who goes hiking with her dad and his best buddy in India Donaldson's intelligent and humane feature debut.
What we said: 'Donaldson sets a low-key tone of banter and backtalk, in which Sam has to ride in the back of her Subaru, making herself carsick by checking her phone and annoying her dad by asking if she can drive; he finds it annoying because she is actually a better driver than he is.' Read the full review.
Shot almost entirely inside a car, Rosamund Pike and Matthew Rhys play a splintering couple trying to save their terrified teenage daughter in a cracking thriller.
What we said: 'A gripping, real-time suspense thriller with a twist of the macabre, a film about family guilt and the return of the repressed.' Read the full review.
Tom Cruise signs off with wildly entertaining adventure in this eighth and last Mission: Impossible, as agent Ethan Hunt takes on the ultimate in AI evil.
What we said: 'Final Reckoning is a new and ultimate challenge (actually the second half of the challenge from the previous film) which takes Cruise's buff and resourceful IMF leader Ethan Hunt on one last maverick, deniable mission to exasperate and yet overawe his stuffed-shirt superiors at Washington and Langley. And what might that be? To save the world of course, like all the other missions.' Read the full review.
Weapons-grade zingers come thick and fast in Jesse Armstrong's post-Succession uber-wealth satire about four plutocrats on a weekend away in a lodge that goes awry when the planet descends into chaos.
What we said: 'More than any comedy or even film I've seen recently, this is movie driven by the line-by-line need for fierce, nasty, funny punched-up stuff in the dialogue, and narrative arcs and character development aren't the point. But as with Succession, this does a really good job of persuading you that, yes, this is what our overlords are really like.' Read the full review.

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Horoscope today, June 13, 2025: Daily star sign guide from Mystic Meg
Horoscope today, June 13, 2025: Daily star sign guide from Mystic Meg

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Horoscope today, June 13, 2025: Daily star sign guide from Mystic Meg

OUR much-loved astrologer Meg sadly died in March 2023 but her column will be kept alive by her friend and protégée Maggie Innes. Read on to see what's written in the stars for you today. ♈ ARIES March 21 to April 20 It may be Friday the 13th, but you're making your own luck and love chances. You have a passion-positive chart of two people finding common ground and ending a time of indecision. This can be an on-off dating pair or a long-time couple. Single? Saturn is so solid in Aries and simply won't take no for an answer. 2 ♉ TAURUS April 21 to May 21 You can keep your feet on the ground but still allow your heart to fly free – and a meeting today, in a place you have always loved, can be the catalyst. You may meet the perfect business partner or love interest. A travel programme may need to be shortened, but the important parts can still happen. Get all the latest Taurus horoscope new s including your weekly and monthly predictions ♊ GEMINI May 22 to June 21 You may feel torn between easy cash and a rewarding but challenging task. Your chart is clear that doing what feels right is key – doing nothing is not an option. Even if the choice is tough, trust yourself to make it. Love is most revealing when partners stop pretending. Single? A tall fellow Gemini is worth a look. Get all the latest Gemini horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions ♋ CANCER June 22 to July 22 The moon makes you an even more thoughtful, considerate friend, while Uranus mischief keeps everyone guessing. A message you assume you have conveyed may have been lost along the way – so do repeat it. Saturn steadies an ambition ladder that wobbled. Now you could take three steps at once. Get all the latest Cancer horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions ♌ LEO July 23 to August 23 The moon and Pluto make a cool couple that's full of surprises, but also some testing times. Take nothing for granted today as you may need to prove your loyalty. But this can leave bonds – at home and at work – in much better shape. Fitness firsts do not matter as much as achieving goals second time around. ♍ VIRGO August 24 to September 22 So many ideas are inside you waiting to get out – making a list of priorities can help get you started. You may hesitate to promote your own skills at first, but this can be the source of fresh confidence, so do celebrate what you can do. In love, when you believe you deserve the best, you can take yourself out of a pattern. Get all the latest Virgo horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions ♎ LIBRA September 23 to October 23 Giving planet Mars a bit more power in your life is a good move as it can take you out of a negotiation that's going round in circles. Stating clearly what you need, and sticking to it, can be the ticket to your happy place with friends and family. In passion, your new emotional depth asks you to be more open. ♏ SCORPIO October 24 to November 22 Your ability to talk to anyone, anywhere, can be noticed today – and someone in a powerful position starts to see you in a new light. So do take any chance you get to chat and offer your advice. You have such a together, caring, Venus chart, plus the intrigue of Uranus, to keep lovers guessing. Bonds are getting hotter! Get all the latest Scorpio horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions ♐ SAGITTARIUS November 23 to December 21 Freedom to feel any way you want to is not a luxury but a necessity – Jupiter helps you get there. Holding back, perhaps through fear of failure, could turn into a try- anything bonanza. Do check in with yourself regularly to make sure love rules are still right for you. If not, you can make smart suggestions. Get all the latest Sagittarius horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions ♑ CAPRICORN December 22 to January 20 Giving up a little to gain a lot is the theme of your day. At work, letting a rival claim one success can leave a better one for you down the line. In love, requesting a partner take the lead, even though you think you know better, can intensify closeness. Single? Letting one love hope go could open your heart to two. Get all the latest Capricorn horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions 2 ♒ AQUARIUS January 21 to February 18 You are the wisest emotional detective in the zodiac, and today you pick up on atmospheres everyone else may miss. Trust that quiet voice inside that guides you in how, and when, to react. Love that is strong underneath can survive surface ripples. Asking for a straight answer defuses negative family tension. Get all the latest Aquarius horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions ♓ PISCES February 19 to March 20 Not believing everything you read is your day's motto – it's too easy to react to words, even if someone's actions are telling you a different story. So promise yourself to follow up in person on anything you see in print. Holding on to cash you have may be a better bet than taking a risk – but do trust your instincts, too.

I love Bowie and Freddie Mercury and I always wanted to be a photo on someone's wall, says Yungblud ahead of new album
I love Bowie and Freddie Mercury and I always wanted to be a photo on someone's wall, says Yungblud ahead of new album

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

I love Bowie and Freddie Mercury and I always wanted to be a photo on someone's wall, says Yungblud ahead of new album

THE idea for Yungblud's new album Idols came after a chance encounter with a fan who claimed he'd saved her life. The Doncaster-born rocker — real name Dominic Harrison — recalls: 'There was a video going round a couple of months ago about a fan crying, saying, 'You saved my life'. 6 6 "I said to her, 'Darling, I've never met you. You saved your own life. Maybe music was the soundtrack, but it was you who did it all'.' Speaking via video call, a svelte and healthy-looking Yungblud explains how the moment forced him to rethink the idea of hero worship. 'I called the album Idols because we all have these photographs on our walls — but why do we credit our emotional growth to people we've never even met, instead of to ourselves?' he says. 'I never met Bowie or Freddie Mercury, but I love them. I always wanted to be someone's photo on the wall — but that's all it is.' Writing the album became a way to explore the feelings of influence and identity. Best work yet 'When you're in your formative years, you're inspired by everything — musicians, your mum, your dad, a sports star. You absorb it all, churn it up inside you, and spit it out as something new. "Something individual. That's what I wanted this album to be — a celebration of individuality.' It's a typically chaotic afternoon when I'm finally connected to Yungblud, who's grinning from the back seat of a cab. 'I'm on my way to Paris,' he says in his unmistakable Yorkshire drawl. 'The album's blown up in France, so I've got to go give the French a bit of love.' As we speak, he's weaving through queues at St Pancras International, waving and shouting 'Bonjour!' to fans who clock him mid-call. 'I'm always on me travels or something,' he says with a laugh. 'But I'm vibing.' YUNGBLUD - teresa Idols is Yungblud's best work yet — the first half of a double concept album he started writing four years ago, just after Weird! topped the album charts. 'I was dissuaded from doing Idols after Weird! because Weird! was so commercially successful,' he says. 'I went and worked with a load of songwriters — and when you do that, you've got seven people a week telling you what Yungblud should do next. I had to figure that out for myself.' 'I didn't want to make vapid songs that sound great on the radio. Yeah, we've got a couple of f**king radio bangers on this record, but I wanted to make one album that's a through line — classic and timeless. "There's no gimmicks, man. None. This is me leaving everything on the table, showing the world what I can do. "That's why I orchestrated everything. I did everything I could to make it as deep and five-dimensional — lyrically and musically — as I possibly could.' I've had a strange relationship with the internet because the polarisation of people loving me so hard and hating me is not a stable ground to walk. You never know when you're about to step on a landmine. Yungblud has always been open about the critics who've tried to tear him down. 'When you're 19, from the north, full of spunk, writing songs about hating Brexit, and you get way bigger than you ever expected, the mainstream starts making you insecure about things you didn't even know about yourself,' he says. 'I've had a strange relationship with the internet because the polarisation of people loving me so hard and hating me is not a stable ground to walk. "You never know when you're about to step on a landmine. "People have questioned my authenticity and I'm not going to lie, it did get to me. It would be easier to just bullsh*t everyone.' That search for something real led him back home. Yungblud decamped to Leeds, just a few miles from where he grew up, to write and record Idols. 'I needed to go back north, to family,' he says. 'Because when you write a record with family, they don't give a f**k about hits, they don't give a fk about radio. "All I want is the truth out here. My mum will tell me when I've been a dick.' Epic rock opera On his journey of reclaiming his self-belief, Yungblud wrote Hello Heaven, Hello, a nine-minute epic rock opera that opens Idols. 'It was the last song I wrote for the album,' he tells me. 'I needed this bridge between the past and now. "It starts shy and unsure like 'Do you love me or do you hate me?' and then takes you on this journey of self-reclamation. It wasn't meant to be nine minutes long.' Inspired by Britpop, Yungblud sees Idols as a celebration of British music. 'I've been all over the world and spent a lot of time in America, but for this album I needed to come home,' he says. 'I love British music, British art — and I'm so happy to be British. I don't think there's enough British music at the forefront of the British music industry right now, so I wanted to make a record that sounded unmistakably British.' I love Irish music too — poets and lyricists like Thin Lizzy, Bob Geldof and Shane MacGowan. He grew up on his dad's favourites — The Stone Roses, Cast, Oasis — while his grandad introduced him to Led Zeppelin, T. Rex and The Beatles. 'I found The Verve myself,' he adds. 'And I really lean on people like Richard Ashcroft — as well as Bowie and Bono, even though he's Irish. It's music from this side of the world. "I love Irish music too — poets and lyricists like Thin Lizzy, Bob Geldof and Shane MacGowan.' The hauntingly poignant Zombie is central to Idols — a powerful ballad inspired by the death of Yungblud's beloved grandma after her battle with alcoholism. Its equally moving video stars Hollywood actress Florence Pugh. 'Zombie came out because of my grandma,' he says. 'She passed from alcohol addiction, and it was one of the hardest things to watch. "She was such a glamorous, beautiful woman who inspired me. Full of life. My grandma and grandad were the main characters in our family — and now they've both passed, Christmas ain't ever the same.' 'I wrote Zombie because watching someone you love silently suffer and deteriorate is devastating. The nurses who cared for her were amazing — a huge inspiration for the song.' Pugh plays a nurse in the emotional video. 'I sent her a DM and asked, and she was into it,' he grins. 'When you've got one of those blue ticks, it does a lot.' Night to remember 'I think the NHS is the single greatest asset we've got in this country, and I wanted to show that. It's a love letter to nurses and I needed a great British artist to tell the story with truth and authenticity. That was Florence.' They wrapped the shoot with a night out to remember. 'We celebrated by necking ten pints of Guinness each at an Irish pub — with a sausage roll and a bag of chips. We didn't go to some Mayfair bar.' Yungblud has openly discussed his struggles with anxiety and ADHD, and two years ago started boxing as a way to manage his mental health and body image issues. 'I needed to take control of my life as I had turned to alcohol and food — I was binging,' he reveals. 'I was doing anything to avoid having to face myself. "When you're in the public eye, you become insecure about things you don't know about because someone has said it. Is that what people think of me? 'So, I got sober for eight months and started boxing. I worked on my relationship with food. I managed to find a sense of self-love and I have really found my confidence. "It's so easy when you are a rockstar to be bored at 10 in the morning, so you crack open a beer. "Or when you're on tour and walk into a dressing room where there's a bottle of whisky, a bottle of champagne and three bottles of wine. "If you don't have anything to do, you open one and before you know it you've drunk half a bottle of whisky before you've gone on stage. It's a really easy thing to fall into. 'Now I can have a couple of pints on the weekend or with my Sunday dinner, but I can't go off the rails as I've got to get up in the morning for training. I'm in a period of my life where I'm really enjoying exploring my masculinity. I'm enjoying saying to the world that I'm a f**king man.' "I'll go out and get battered once a week, to blow off steam, but I can't do it more than that because of my boxing.' Reflecting on where he's at right now, Yungblud says: 'I'm in a period of my life where I'm really enjoying exploring my masculinity. I'm enjoying saying to the world that I'm a f**king man.' He adds: 'It's hard for young lads at the moment, especially with Andrew Tate's ideas floating about. "We've got to look after them — teach them there's a compassionate, caring, emotional side to masculinity. "If they fall through the cracks, it's going to be a dark generation.' Emotionally, Yungblud is still drawn to one person, American musician and actor Jesse Jo Stark, who Yungblud confesses is the 'love of my life' but had to pause their relationship because of his personal struggles. 'I needed to go away and work on myself as a man, as I've been doing this job since I was 18 and needed to grow. "We talk every Sunday. I really hope we can work it out as she's a queen, but we need to work on the foundations of the relationship before we jump back in. "It's really hard to navigate this life when there are 10 million people in a relationship of two.' I do things my way Next weekend, Yungblud's very own one-day music festival returns to Milton Keynes Bowl. Curated and headlined by the singer, Bludfest launched in 2024 as a protest against inflated ticket prices — he keeps tickets capped at £49.50 to stay affordable and inclusive. 'It's great because I get to do things my way,' he says. 'No one backed us at first. "We had to bow our heads and tip our caps to all the promoters who didn't think it was going to work. I had to compromise a lot — but we still got 30,000 people to Milton Keynes.' This year's show will feature a fresh setlist packed with new material. 6 6 'I'm going to play Hello, Lovesick Lullaby, Zombie and probably Ghosts and Monday Murder from the new album. "We're going to have fun with it. I'm bringing out some mates and we're going to celebrate. "I'm so proud of Lola Young and how far she's come — she was at Bludfest last year,' says Yungblud. 'This year we've got Rachel Chinouriri playing, and I'm excited about her, too. There's so much music I love right now. " Sam Fender — he's a new classic artist, someone who'll still be playing when he's 70. Same with Lewis Capaldi and Fontaines D.C. I love what the Fontaines are doing. "They are really cool. And I'm a big fan of Amyl And The Sniffers. There's a new, exciting culture of rock music happening at the minute and I'm buzzing about it.' Idols is out on June 20 and Bludfest takes place on Saturday, June 21 at The National Bowl in Milton Keynes. ★★★★☆

Cristiano Ronaldo deals with rude fan after Portugal's Nations League victory as he calls out behaviour of selfie-hunting supporter in Munich
Cristiano Ronaldo deals with rude fan after Portugal's Nations League victory as he calls out behaviour of selfie-hunting supporter in Munich

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Cristiano Ronaldo deals with rude fan after Portugal's Nations League victory as he calls out behaviour of selfie-hunting supporter in Munich

Cristiano Ronaldo was forced to deal with a rude fan in Munich on the back of Portugal's Nations League victory. Ronaldo helped his country to their second title in the competition, scoring in both the semi-final and final out in Germany as Roberto Martinez's side claimed victory. First, the Al-Nassr forward was on hand to tap in the winner against home side Germany in the semi-finals, setting up a mouth-watering clash with Spain in the final two. Though the European champions were favourites, Portugal delivered, drawing 2-2 after trailing and then winning on penalties. Ronaldo, meanwhile, scored the equaliser. Portugal embarked on a series of celebrations and Ronaldo was no different. The 40-year-old was seen donning sunglasses and a shirt that read 'campeones' on the back of the win. In Munich, the forward greeted a handful of fans who were looking for autographs and selfies, though he took exception to one supporter's actions. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Daily Mail Sport (@dailymailsport) In a video shared by Mail Sport, Ronaldo was seen signing autographs as he made his way down the line. Eager fans waited in anticipation, but Ronaldo dodged one selfie before another fan jumped into his path, looking to a photo. The ex-Manchester United star almost walked into the supporter, taking a step back as his face dropped after he had seemingly suggested he needed to leave. He held out his hands, frustrated, exchanging some words with the supporter. That didn't put him off, however, and he tried again, before Ronaldo put his hand on his shoulder. Eventually, after rejecting that photo too, Ronaldo carried on down the line and did eventually pose for a photo - with a different supporter. Ronaldo confirmed after the win that he would be staying with Al-Nassr despite suggestions he could leave to head to the Club World Cup. 'The tears were of joy. When you win something for Portugal, it's always special, but there's nothing like winning for the national team, in my opinion,' the 40-year-old said. 'This generation deserved it and we were going to have a bit of luck and merit and we were going to win the final. 'We knew it was going to be difficult but we deserved it and this gives us confidence and allows us to go to the World Cup with more confidence. Future? It won't change anything. Al-Nassr, yes.'

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