9th November 2009 - The Glasgow Guardian



Staff outcry at restructure plans

9th November 2009

Sarah Smith New Principal, Anton Muscatelli, is facing “the worst piece of staff relations … in a very long time”, according to one senior academic, after announcing plans for a complete overhaul of Glasgow University’s teaching and management structure. The restructure is to help Glasgow become one of the top fifty universities in the world, ...


Life, the Universe and Everything

9th November 2009

Tom Bonnick This October marked the thirtieth anniversary of one of the most enduring and hilarious works of fiction ever written. Normally, this should be a cause for unbridled joy and celebration, but in the case of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, it is impossible to feel wholehearted happiness, because the series’ author, Douglas ...


The Roots of Evil

9th November 2009

Leon Weber At this year’s Cannes film festival, the controversy surrounding Lars von Trier’s Antichrist came at the expense of Austrian director Michael Haneke, who won the Palme d’Or over von Trier for his latest film, The White Ribbon. Funnily enough, it is the controversy of Haneke’s films that have made him a regular nominee ...


In defence of the less radical

9th November 2009

Lee Roden Aside from a three day period where people relentlessly set off explosives during the night, November tends to be a boring month. It was much to my delight then that I discovered the GFT was taking part in a month-long French cinema festival, mixing both the old and the contemporary. Yet, to my ...


Iraq through the eyes of Hollywood

9th November 2009

Lucia Hodgson To kill Guy Pierce and Ralph Fiennes within fifteen minutes of them appearing on screen is a brave move. But then, Kathryn Bigelow has always been a brave lady. Her back catalogue of masculine blockbusters is impressive, including Near Dark, Point Break, and Strange Days. So it came as no surprise when it ...


The Men Who Stare At Goats (Dir: Grant Heslov)

9th November 2009

Marta Sørenson Considering how badly this movie wants to tell us something fresh and profound about the last forty years of American military intervention, it uses up a hell of a lot of our time and patience to talk about a million other things, talk being the operative word. Whatever stories about war and peace ...


Fantastic Mr. Fox (Dir: Wes Anderson)

9th November 2009

Tom Bonnick There is something about the glittering list of names that appear in the opening credits of Fantastic Mr. Fox that seems to suggest that fate had a hand to play in the making of this picture. In retrospect, it seems only inevitable that George Clooney would, having acted out every possible permutation of ...


Lara Favaretto (Tramway Gallery)

9th November 2009

Jessie Rodger In Lara Favaretto’s new exhibition at the Tramway I was struck immediately by the striking image of a car wash brush freed from the confines of its daily existence and dynamically thrown into an artistic situation. This created an engaging concept. Something so familiar to us, that we have the habit of viewing ...


Othello (Citizens Theatre)

9th November 2009

John Gerard McFaulds Whenever I see the words “modern” and “Shakespeare” together, I tend to shudder and think of the playwright spinning in his grave. However, Guy Hollands’ modern retelling of The Bard’s domestic tragedy Othello exceeded my initial cynical expectations by superbly pulling off the fusion of classic Shakespearean dialogue with modern setting and ...


The Beggar’s Opera (Tramway Theatre)

9th November 2009

Lauren Martin John Gay’s original vision of a criminal underworld was steeped in satirical criticism of the eighteenth century aristocracy, where common social values are diminished to critique the abuses of power and wealth in a morally bankrupt society. Vanishing Point’s drastic re-imagining of The Beggar’s Opera is described by its director Matthew Lenton as ...