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Newsnight Review: Friday, 30 January, 2009

Sarah McDermott | 17:03 UK time, Friday, 30 January 2009

Here's Kirsty with news of this evening's programme:

Tonight on Review I'll be joined by , and . We'll enter the suburban hell of , adapted from Richard Yates' dark novel and directed by Sam Mendes (who last explored this territory in American Beauty). Kate Winslet is reunited with Leonardo DiCaprio and they play young, 1950s couple, April and Frank Wheeler who find their dreams of a bohemian artistic life snuffed out by their move to Connecticut to raise their family.

We review artistic responses to the Middle East conflict too. At London's Barbican Theatre a Tel Aviv theatre company's drama (Hebrew for "Tangle") explores the everyday realities of the Israel-Palestinian conflict with a cast of Israeli Jewish and Arab actors.

At the Saatchi Gallery in London a new exhibition, , features the work of young Iranian, Iraqi, Lebanese and Palestinian artists working in their home countries or abroad. We'll look in particular at how conflict is portrayed in the work.

, a new play by Joe Sutton premiering at the Old Vic, explores the relationship between journalist and government post 9/11. Benjamin Kritzer, played by Richard Dreyfuss, is under pressure to reveal the source within government that told him about "black sites", secret CIA prisons. Will he go to jail, his journalistic integrity intact, or will he give her away?

wrote the first rules of architecture in the 16th century based on his study of ancient Roman buildings. He created a vocabulary that has informed architecture ever since, from Inigo Jones to the modernism of Mies Van Der Rohe. The Royal Academy in London (which itself had a 9th century Palladian makeover) has mounted an exhibition to celebrate 500 years since his birth. There are drawings, letters, writings, fragments, models of his most famous buildings (including the Villa Rotunda), and a computer-fly though.

Do join us at 11pm. And check out our Newsnight Review discussions about the last two works of the late great John Updike, and .

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    For more interest, try reviewing the week's news and your bloggers' comments on the way the world is moving instead of all this Hollywood etc piffle?

  • Comment number 2.

    JJ @ [1]

    An extraordinarily ungracious remark breathtaking in its egocentricity.

    Do you really imagine that the contributions of Newsnight bloggers (and I take it you mean to valorise especially yours) is of more interest than, say, Palladio?

    You justify your off-topic spam in the Newsnight blog on the unconvincing ground it's news (but your main theme is decades old) and now if you please you move into an Arts review program.

    Your blogs thus a species of performance art perhaps?

  • Comment number 3.

    rinpoche1 (#2) "An extraordinarily ungracious remark breathtaking in its egocentricity."

    Not at all. The blog is posted to (and read by more I'm sure) by Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú licence payers. It's only a subset of subscribers, so I'm sugesting that the blog be used as a 'Points Of View review of the week's coverage by Newsnight.

    At the moment, it appears to be ignored by the programme. If the Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú production Team isn't interested in what it's blog posters have to say, is it interested in what it's viewers think/watch?

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