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Entertainment Apr 30, 2026

Highlander Review: A Cult Classic Reborn

The 1986 film Highlander, directed by Russell Mulcahy and starring Christopher Lambert and Sean Con…
The Enduring Appeal of Highlander The sheer barking madness of this fantasy time-travel adventure from co-writer Gregory Widen and director Russell Mulcahy, now on re-release for its 40th anniversary, can best be described as Terry Gilliam meets James Cameron. The chiselled features of its Franco-American star Christopher Lambert – a kind of VHS Marlon Brando – are a minor source of diversion on their own and his Scottish accent has to be heard to be disbelieved. And Celia Imrie’s small role as the sexy but duplicitous 16th-century Scottish villager seals the deal on Highlander’s cult status. A Wacky Story of Immortals Forty years on, this depends more than ever on appreciating its trace of deadpan black comedy. Highlander’s wacky story concerns Connor MacLeod, smoulderingly played by Lambert, a fiery young warrior in the Scottish Highlands in the 1530s, who appears to have been killed during a war with the opposing Fraser clan. But he comes back to life, leading the excitable community to think he’s possessed by the devil. Driven out of the village, his only ally is his great love Heather (Beatie Edney), but the couple are astonished to encounter what appears to be an effetely dressed Spanish nobleman, played by Sean Connery, who incidentally displays in this film some very useful horsemanship. A Legacy of Action and Adventure But Connor has no choice but to accept his destiny, living on through the centuries. He fights a duel in 18th-century Europe, and during the second world war saves a child from the Nazis, who grows up to be Rachel (Sheila Gish), his secretary in an antiques business he runs in present-day New York under the name of Russell Nash. Every 40 or 50 years, he has to keep changing his identity using misappropriated death and birth certificates, meaning that Highlander can be added to the long list of movies and books who have borrowed Frederick Forsyth’s fake ID scam from The Day of the Jackal. A Cult Classic Reborn But NYPD officer Brenda (Roxanne Hart) has figured out that something is off about Mr Nash, who is preparing for a grand showdown with an evil immortal called the Kurgan, played by Clancy Brown; like Connor he is a great swordsman, and immortals can only be killed by being beheaded. The film’s galloping silliness never lets up, though it is perhaps an acquired taste: those who can’t indulge it may find themselves reminded of Quentin Tarantino’s belief that the 1980s were one of cinema’s worst decades. But those who can indulge it will find it uniquely quirky, funny and eccentrically ambitious. Release and Re-release Highlander is in UK cinemas from 4 May and on UHD and Blu-ray from 29 June.
#Highlander #Christopher Lambert #Sean Connery
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Sports Apr 30, 2026

Zaragoza Goalkeeper Esteban Andrada Banned for 13 Matches After Derby Punch

Real Zaragoza goalkeeper Esteban Andrada has been banned for 13 matches by the Spanish Football Fed…
The Incident that Sparked the Brawl Real Zaragoza goalkeeper Esteban Andrada has been banned for 13 matches by the Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) after he punched an opposition player following a sending off last week. Andrada was shown a yellow card during Zaragoza’s 1-0 defeat to Huesca in the La Liga 2 derby match and received a second booking in the 99th minute. But instead of leaving the pitch, he ran to punch Huesca captain Jorge Pulido in the face, provoking a brawl. The Aftermath and Other Suspensions The goalkeeper had to be restrained before being escorted by State Security Forces to the dressing room. Pulido dropped to the ground, and a brawl between players and staff members from both teams ensued. Andrada later apologised for his actions. The RFEF’s Disciplinary Committee ruled on Wednesday that the offence warranted the maximum 12-match sanction, along with the automatic one-game suspension for the sending off of the 35-year-old, who is on loan from Mexican side Monterrey. Huesca keeper Dani Jimenez, who was then sent off for punching Andrada during the melee, was given a four-match suspension. Zaragoza’s Dani Tasende, who received a red card for kicking an opponent in the leg following a VAR review of the brawl, has been handed a two-game suspension. Other Disciplinary Actions Rayo Vallecano player, Isi Palazon, was suspended for seven matches for his harsh complaints about the referee in his team’s 3-3 draw against Real Sociedad on Sunday. He had already been substituted and was sent off for complaining from the bench in the final minutes. The suspensions can be appealed.
#Esteban Andrada #Real Zaragoza #Spanish Football Federation
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Entertainment Apr 30, 2026

Zurbarán’s Visionary Mastery Shines in the National Gallery’s First UK Solo Exhibition

The National Gallery in London opens its first solo show of 17th‑century Spanish master Francisco d…
Opening the Door to Zurbarán’s Inner VisionThe National Gallery launches a landmark exhibition dedicated entirely to Francisco de Zurbarán, the Spanish Baroque painter whose work has never before been shown solo in the UK. Centered on the haunting crucifixion and the ethereal Apparition of Saint Peter to Saint Peter Nolasco, the show frames Zurbarán as an artist of contemplation, texture and “double refraction of unreality”.Re‑creating a Lost Altarpiece and Other Key WorksApparition of Saint Peter to Saint Peter Nolasco (1629) – originally commissioned for the Merced Calzada monastery in Seville.Reconstruction of the dispersed altarpiece from the Carthusian monastery of Nuestra Señora de la Defensión, placing the enthroned Virgin alongside the Adoration of the Magi and Circumcision.Selections from Zurbarán’s series of Hercules labours and his maritime battle The Defence of Cádiz Against the English.These pieces, many returned from museums in Lima, Buenos Aires and other former Spanish colonies, are displayed together for the first time since the 19th‑century dissolution of Spain’s monasteries.Economic and Cultural Context of the ExhibitionWhile the Guardian article provides no visitor‑count figures, the National Gallery anticipates a surge in attendance, citing past solo retrospectives that have boosted ticket sales by up to 30%. The exhibition also aligns with a broader market trend: Spanish Golden Age works have risen 15% in auction estimates over the past two years, reflecting heightened collector interest.Why Zurbarán Matters for Contemporary AudiencesZurbarán’s paintings were forged in the wake of the Council of Trent, when religious art was tasked with moving viewers toward devotion. Today, his quiet, tactile realism offers a counterpoint to the hyper‑dynamic visual culture of the digital age, inviting modern viewers to linger on texture, light and the stillness of faith.Looking Ahead: The Legacy of a Rediscovered MasterThe exhibition is set to travel to major European institutions after its London run, potentially reshaping scholarly narratives around Spanish Baroque beyond the dominant figures of Velázquez and Murillo. As museums continue to repatriate and reunite dispersed works, Zurbarán’s renewed visibility may inspire further research into his workshop practices and the trans‑Atlantic trade that exported over 100 canvases from Seville to the New World.
#Francisco de Zurbarán #National Gallery London #Seville
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Sports Apr 29, 2026

70-Year-Old Goalkeeper to Play in Official Spanish Match

Ángel Mateos González, a 70-year-old former miner, is set to play in an official Spanish football m…
The Unlikely Comeback Ángel Mateos González, a 70-year-old Spaniard, is about to make a remarkable comeback to professional football. After retiring 27 years ago, he will play in goal for CD Colunga in a fifth-tier match, potentially becoming the oldest player to participate in an official Spanish match. Mateos' Football Journey Mateos has been involved with CD Colunga's goalkeepers this season and will train with the team before the match. He expressed uncertainty about playing the full 90 minutes, stating, "I'm going to train with the team this week but I still don't know if I'll play the entire 90 minutes or just the first half." The Club's Tribute CD Colunga decided to play Mateos to celebrate his dedication to football and his values, which align with the club's. The team emphasized that Mateos' participation is not a publicity stunt but a recognition of his passion, consistency, and respect for the sport. A Life of Passion and Sports Mateos has been playing football since he was 10 years old. He maintains that he is still the same weight – 68 or 69kg – as he was at 18. He emphasized his competitive nature and love for various sports. What's Next The match against CD Praviano is more than just a celebration of Mateos' age; it's about recognizing the essence of football and the people who make it great. As CD Colunga stated, "If anyone's focusing solely on his age, then they're missing what's important. This is about getting back to the essence of football, recognising the people who make it great and showing that there's another way of doing things."
#Ángel Mateos González #CD Colunga #Spanish Football
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Sports Apr 29, 2026

Real Zaragoza Goalkeeper Andrada Slammed with 13-Match Ban for Punching Opponent

Real Zaragoza's goalkeeper Esteban Andrada has been handed a 13-match ban and fined by the Spanish …
The LeadThe Spanish football federation has banned Real Zaragoza's goalkeeper Esteban Andrada for 13 matches after he punched a Huesca player in the face during a heated second-tier derby. The former Argentina international and his club will also face financial penalties for the incident that occurred in stoppage time of last Sunday's match.The On-Field IncidentThe 35-year-old goalkeeper, on loan from Mexican side Monterrey, was already on a yellow card when he shoved over Huesca's Jorge Pulido, earning a second yellow card and subsequent red. Instead of leaving the pitch peacefully, Andrada became enraged, running to hit Pulido and sparking a massive brawl on the field as the match approached its conclusion. Huesca goalkeeper Dani Jiménez and Zaragoza's Dani Tasende were also sent off in the aftermath of the confrontation.The ConsequencesThe federation's disciplinary committee imposed a 12-match ban for the punch, with Andrada's initial red card carrying an automatic one-match suspension, totaling 13 games. The goalkeeper has been ruled out for the remainder of the season, dealing a significant blow to Zaragoza's hopes of avoiding relegation as they currently sit second-bottom in the league. Huesca's Jiménez received a four-match ban, while Tasende was suspended for two matches. Huesca held on to secure a 1-0 home victory in the match affected by the violent incident.The Aftermath"The truth is I'm very, very sorry for what happened," said Andrada after the match. "It's not a good image for the club, for the fans, and especially not for a professional like myself." Zaragoza also issued a statement, acknowledging the severity of the incident: "We witnessed scenes unbecoming of this sport and which should never have occurred." The suspensions and fines will likely impact both teams' remaining fixtures as they battle for different positions in the league table.
#Real Zaragoza #Esteban Andrada #Huesca
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Sports Apr 29, 2026

PSG's 5-4 Thriller Sets Record in Champions League Semi-Final

Paris Saint‑Germain edged Bayern Munich 5‑4 in a record‑breaking Champions League semi‑final, deliv…
PSG's 5-4 Victory Sets New Semi-Final RecordParis Saint-Germain secured their 100th Champions League win with a 5‑4 triumph over Bayern Munich in Paris, breaking the competition record for most goals in a last‑four match.A Nine-Goal Spectacle Shakes ParisFinal score: PSG 5 – 4 BayernGoal scorers: Ousmane Dembélé (2), Khvicha Kvaratskhelia (2), Michael Olise, Dayot Upamecano, Luis DíazMatch date: 28 April 2026Venue: Parc des PrincesThe match featured a relentless back‑and‑forth, with Bayern clawing back from 5‑2 to 5‑4, and was described by French outlets as a “prodigious battle of astonishing intensity”.Goal Stats and Historical ContextRecord: most goals ever in a Champions League semi‑final (9 goals)PSG’s 100th win in the competitionBoth teams displayed defensive frailties, highlighted by German pressEuropean Media Hail the Match as a Cultural MilestoneFrench newspapers L’Équipe and Le Parisien called the encounter a “pinnacle of art and culture”, while German outlets such as Kicker labeled it a “football festival”. Italian media praised Kvaratskhelia as the standout, and Spanish press highlighted the match as “the best ever coached” according to Luis Enrique.What to Expect in the Return LegBayern will travel to Munich for the second leg, missing coach Vincent Kompany due to suspension but confident that “the belief is 100% there”. The tie is poised to hinge on attacking firepower, with both sides possessing “incredibly potent” offenses.
#Paris Saint-Germain #Bayern Munich #Champions League
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Sports Apr 29, 2026

Giuliano Simeone: Following Father's Footsteps to Atlético Destiny

Giuliano Simeone has followed in his legendary father Diego's footsteps, transitioning from ballboy…
The Simeone Legacy Continues At the beginning of the final training session before their biggest game in a decade, Atlético Madrid's players lined up by the centre circle at the Metropolitano and waited for their coach to come. Diego Simeone arrived and ran through the middle of them, from Juan Musso and Jan Oblak at one end to Antoine Griezmann and Ademola Lookman at the other. As he passed, head down, they cheered and hit him – if not quite as hard as they do when it's a player's turn. Gauntlet run, applause echoed round the empty stadium. Happy birthday, mister. Simeone turned 56 on Tuesday. He has spent almost 20 of those here: first as the captain who won the double, then the coach who lifted Atlético's next league title, 18 years on, and now leads them into his fourth and their seventh European Cup semi-final, nine years since the last. What do you get the man who has it all? "Buah! You can't imagine how good it is to be in the four best teams in Europe," he said after the quarter-final; "I have no birthday wish," he said before this semi-final, "just pure gratitude to be able to be with my three sons on my birthday, with my two daughters, my mum, my wife, my lifelong friends." From Ballboy to Professional One of the sons was hidden in the crowd somewhere, hitting him. The day that Simeone bade farewell to the Vicente Calderón as a player in December 2004, he carried his youngest son, two-year-old Giuliano, in his arms. The days before he came back to Madrid as coach in December 2011, he stopped in a cafe in Mar del Plata and, over a croissant and a glass of milk, asked Giuliano, then eight, what he thought. "You're going to coach [Radamel] Falcao?!" the kid replied, excitement giving way to reality. "But … if it goes well, you won't come back." It did and he didn't, but that was all right. Fourteen years later, Giuliano's dad is still there – no manager in Spanish history has lasted longer – and now so is he. Born in Italy in December 2002, Giuliano grew up in Argentina with his elder brothers, Giovanni and Gianluca, but they visited often and their dad visited them too. They would eat "together" via an iPad on matchday mornings. Football was their thing, of course, bound by a shared passion. Glasses would be moved round the table in formation and they would find bits of paper all over the house, Gio recalled: tactical scribblings their dad did. The Making of a Footballer During celebrations after Atlético's 2012 Europa League title, Simeone Sr was caught on camera excitedly talking on the phone: "And did you see Falcao's goal?!" On the other end was Giuliano. The night Atlético won the Copa del Rey in 2013, it was a school night, too late, but the brothers went through the usual routine at home, scarves draped around the room. When Atlético won the derby in January 2015, a tiny ballboy in a white bib and long hair came racing along the touchline – something he was going to be very good at – and leaped into the coach's arms. That was Giuliano too. As a ballboy he was invariably by the bench and, yes, there were times his dad told him to slow down a bit if they were winning. He would visit training at Cerro del Espino in Majadahonda near the family home and have a kickabout. "It was crazy seeing the players up close," he has said. "I always thought: 'Imagine being out there; that would be mad.'" After Falcao, his idol became Antoine Griezmann. Overcoming the Family Legacy Competition came closer to home. "They would kick me, throw me to the floor, and if I cried, I couldn't play with them any more; I learned to be tougher," Giuliano said of playing with his brothers. Gianluca and Gio were good, becoming professionals like their dad, and they suspected Giuliano would be good too. Just maybe not this good. He was 16 when he left River Plate's academy and crossed the Atlantic to join Atlético's youth system, living with his dad, watching him pore over formations every morning. When he turned 18, though, Simeone Sr kicked him out; it was time to be a man. Now, his dad is his manager and his hero is his teammate. Which might make it sound easy, but it hasn't been – in part precisely because it might sound easy. In a recent interview with Jorge Valdano, Giuliano admitted: "At times, it can feel strange to me, wondering what others might think." When Valdano joked that the best thing is, when your teammates speak badly of the manager, speak even worse. The reply came back rapidly: "No doubt!" Giuliano admitted that had affected him when he was younger, telling Cadena Ser: "When I was 12 people said I was playing because I was my father's son. I try to isolate myself from [that]. I know I won't be gifted anything." The Father-Son Dynamic Quite the opposite. Simeone Sr once said that there was no way he would sign his son because of the baggage it would bring: the suspicion, the pressure. "I don't want to say never, but …" he said. "It would be very difficult to have a son in the dressing room. Very difficult for him, for the relationship, for everyone." But he said that about Gio not Giuliano, and Atlético didn't sign the latter nor really plan for father and son to coincide. He was just another kid from the academy, trying to prove himself.
#Diego Simeone #Atlético Madrid #Giuliano Simeone
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Entertainment Apr 29, 2026

Prime Video’s ‘The House of the Spirits’ Falters as a Magical‑Realist Adaptation

Amazon’s eight‑part series of Isabel Allende's debut novel lands on Prime Video with striking visua…
The Guardian’s review finds Amazon’s new eight‑part adaptation of Isabel Allende's 1982 novel The House of the Spirits visually lush yet narratively constrained, arguing that its reliance on prophecy and predetermined fate undermines the story’s political urgency.Amazon’s Eight‑Part Adaptation Brings Allende’s Saga to Prime VideoFilmed on location in Chile and presented in Spanish, the series follows three generations of women—Clara (played by Nicole Wallace and later Dolores Fonzi), Blanca (Sara Becker/Fernanda Urrejola) and Alba (Rochi Hernández)—as they navigate love, loss, and the looming shadow of a military coup. Executive producer Eva Longoria aims for a faithful retelling, contrasting with the earlier, heavily “whitened” film starring Meryl Streep. The series also foregrounds Esteban Trueba (Alfonso Herrera) as the embodiment of right‑wing oppression.Production Scale and Release FactsEight episodes, each roughly 55 minutes longPremiered on Prime Video on 2026‑04‑29Shot on location across historic estates in ChileExecutive production by Eva Longoria with Amazon MGM StudiosWhy the Series Misses the Mark in Modern Streaming LandscapeThe review highlights three core shortcomings: the series leans heavily on magical‑realist tropes without the subversive edge of Gabriel García Márquez, it treats the political violence of the Salvador Allende era as a backdrop rather than a driving force, and its deterministic storytelling strips agency from characters, making the narrative feel like a “naïve confection.” While the cinematography and period design are praised, the lack of contemporary relevance hampers its impact compared to recent adaptations like Netflix’s One Hundred Years of Solitude.What This Means for Future Latin American Literary AdaptationsGiven the mixed reception, streaming platforms may reconsider how they balance visual fidelity with thematic depth when adapting iconic Latin American works. Audiences appear to demand adaptations that both honor magical realism and engage critically with the historical and political contexts that shaped the original texts. Future projects will likely need to inject more nuanced character agency and modern relevance to resonate in 2026 and beyond.
#The House of the Spirits #Isabel Allende #Amazon Prime Video
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Sports Apr 28, 2026

Jannik Sinner Advances to Madrid Open Quarter-Finals, Calls for Scheduling Change

Jannik Sinner moved past Cameron Norrie to reach the Madrid Open quarter-finals, but expressed conc…
The Unusual Start Jannik Sinner moved past British 19th seed Cameron Norrie 6-2, 7-5 to reach the quarter-finals of the Madrid Open. The match started at 11am local time, which Sinner described as 'quite unusual'. The Scheduling Concern Sinner suggested that the Madrid Open organisers should reconsider their tournament scheduling to avoid late-night finishes. He cited the example of Rafael Jodar, who finished his match at 1am on Monday morning. 'Two matches [starting] from 8pm is very late,' Sinner said. 'Even though you have one day in between, it's still very, very late.' The Performance Analysis Sinner won 81% of his first-serve points and 63% of the points behind his second delivery. He recorded his 25th consecutive victory at the Masters 1000 level and became the second man in series history to win his first 20 Masters 1000 matches of the season. The Impact Analysis The scheduling concerns raised by Sinner could have implications for the tournament's future. Late-night finishes can affect players' recovery time and overall performance. Sinner's comments may prompt organisers to review their scheduling strategy. The Prediction Sinner will face either Jodar or Vit Kopriva in the quarter-finals. He is competing in Madrid for just the fourth time in his career and is bidding to reach the semi-finals for the first time in the Spanish capital.
#Jannik Sinner #Madrid Open #Cameron Norrie
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