That's Entertainment
- 1 day ago
- 2 min read

TV: Fallen (ITVX, 3rd May)
A supernatural fantasy romance based on Lauren Kate’s bestselling novels, starring Jessica Alexander. Expect angels, destiny, forbidden love and celestial conflict.
Sent to a cult-like reform facility called Sword & Cross for a crime she can't remember, troubled teen Luce (Jessica Alexander) finds herself dangerously drawn to the mysterious Daniel. As strange visions and dark shadows haunt her, she uncovers a centuries-old love story and a celestial war, revealing she is a fallen angel caught in an epic supernatural battle.

Film: I’ve Seen All I Need To See (in Cinemas from 1st May)
Memory is a mirror, but sometimes, it reflects only darkness. After the sudden and violent death of her estranged sister, Indiana, actor Parker (Renee Gagner) leaves Los Angeles and returns to her hometown in search of answers.
As Parker revisits familiar yet forgotten ground, she must confront the immense gravity of Indiana's passing without surrendering to its encroaching darkness. Told through a non-linear and haunting lens, the film is equal parts ghost story and noir. It examines the gaps in space, time, and judgment that are created when attempting to move on from personal tragedy.
The closer Parker looks, the quicker she realises those gaps are more like holes punched into the walls of an empty house, dark voids searching for and swallowing all available light. Parker is haunted not only by grief but by the unresolved distance that existed between the two sisters before death separated them entirely.

Music: Lip Critic: Theft World (Partisan, from 1st May)
This new album’s backstory is absurdly on-brand. While touring their frontman Bret Kaser discovered his identity had been stolen by a man in a ‘Five Nights at Freddy's’ hoodie who believed Lip Critic's music contained hidden scavenger hunt codes. Instead of calling the police, the band took him to a halal joint and recorded his mythology. Then they scrapped their already-in-progress album to make ‘Theft World’.
The result is less clubby than expected, swapping their album ‘Hex Dealer's’ pure blast beats for shockingly melodic, pretty decorations and R&B chord movements (blame Kaser's Stevie Wonder obsession). ‘Legs In A Snare’ re-amps an 808 into power chords. ‘Jackpot’ unfolds like a gambler's tragedy with a synthetic organ beneath the clang. Drummer Danny Eberle lays slam death metal over electronic demos, then lets the kit dictate every song's visceral direction. ‘My Blush’ repeats "trust him with my life and more" like a prayer, while ‘Shoplifting’ offers Lip Critic's prettiest, stillest moment yet.






