Tag Archives: Five Stars

DARKFIELD

★★★★★

Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park

DARKFIELD:

FLIGHT | COMA | EULOGY | ARCADE

Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park

★★★★★

“meticulously crafted to mess with your senses”

Step into the void with a disorientating, immersive evening at ‘Darkfield’, where shipping containers conceal extraordinary secrets, and total darkness exposes more than you bargained for. Brace yourself – this pitch-black plunge isn’t for the faint of heart.

‘Darkfield’ delivers four mind-bending binaural journeys in total darkness. You can experience as many or as few as you like before regrouping at a central hub complete with beats and bar. My running order is ‘Flight’, ‘Eulogy’, ‘Coma’ and ‘Arcade’, which I recommend.

‘Flight’ kicks things off with a bang (literally). This is a flight simulator with a twist – think Schrödinger’s cat but with humans. The immersion begins the moment you’re handed a boarding pass, the plane cabin complete with overhead bins to stow your ‘luggage’. Screens spring to life for a pre-recorded safety briefing. Though the video keeps glitching – wait, why’s that face familiar? Then darkness. Take off is tricky, engines roaring and cabin quivering, and the higher you go, the stranger it gets – weren’t those curtains blue before? Bad weather looms – will you make it out alive?

‘Eulogy’ is a surreal, recursive dream (or nightmare) shaped by audience choices. We’re handed key cards to hotel suites… only to find ourselves in the loading bay. Lights out. A ‘companion’ lull us to sleep as we move through the hotel. Finally, our real rooms. Though be careful with that ornament, you don’t want to break it– a shattering crash ends your reverie. How will we get to the rehearsal like this? What if we miss the convention? But the endless hotel has other ideas, and you’ve more in common with the ornament than you realise.

‘Coma’ is the most disorientating of the four. Stepping into a room with floor to ceiling bunk beds, this is the only experience you take lying down. Your attention’s drawn to the pill by your head. Do you all take it and surrender to the collective dream? Or resist and tough it out? As darkness closes in, the smell of surgical spirit fills the air and… are we in a hospital? Who’s that pacing the corridor and why won’t everyone lie still?

‘Arcade’ is a darkly fun one to finish on. You step into an 80s arcade hall, controlling your destiny for the first time. Through a combination of button pressing and coin slotting, you guide ‘Milk’ through a choose your own adventure – though think fast, or Milk might die. Can you complete all the levels and win the game? And how many lives will you trade to get there?

Each experience is meticulously crafted to mess with your senses. The visual deprivation is almost total, with a few well-timed flashes made more jarring in complete blackout. The binaural soundscape feels real, the roving sound conjuring people and places with almost hallucinatory effect. The voice acting is expert, ranging from emphatic to conspiratorial. The other senses work overtime, deciphering scents, splats and puffs of air. The set and lighting design are flawless down to the last detail – whether it’s flight safety cards with mirrored reverses, housekeeping checklists on your laundry trolley, or arcade machines delivering gunshot recoil.

Each experience is wildly different, pushing the boundaries of theatre. ‘Flight’ is an immersive thought experiment that’s definitely not for nervous fliers – the plane looks real and soundscape features occasional screaming. It’s intense but thrilling. ‘Eulogy’ blurs the line between sleep and waking and keeps you guessing despite tailoring your experience. The journey is cryptic but captivating – just like sleep, it’s better not to fight it. ‘Coma’ is a dystopian brain melt, the binaural audio evoking multiple people. It’s utterly enthralling and worth persevering with, even if I find it the most unnerving experience. ‘Arcade’ is a great one to finish on, reasserting your agency even if it’s so you can die repeatedly. The staging is excellent with some shocking 4D effects. A post-show chat with the person next to me reveals wildly different stories – worth doing again! Though seeing all four shows in one sitting is hardcore and the upbeat DJ provides a very welcome buffer.

‘Darkfield’ is unforgettable, unnerving, and unlike any other theatre. It’s intense, unsettling, and probably not for everyone – definitely read the trigger warnings. But for those who dare, the reward is a breathtaking descent into a world that challenges reality.



DARKFIELD

Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park

Reviewed on 9th October 2025

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Mihaela Bodlovic


 

More five star shows :

DARKFIELD | ★★★★★ | QUEEN ELIZABETH OLYMPIC PARK | October 2025
CHARLEY’S AUNT | ★★★★★ | WATERMILL THEATRE NEWBURY | October 2025
PRISM | ★★★★★ | SADLER’S WELLS EAST | October 2025
EXXY | ★★★★★ | BATTERSEA ARTS CENTRE | October 2025
THE CHOIR OF MAN | ★★★★★ | ARTS THEATRE | October 2025
BAD LADS | ★★★★★ | LIVE THEATRE | October 2025
13 GOING ON 30 | ★★★★★ | MANCHESTER OPERA HOUSE | September 2025
50 FIRST DATES: THE MUSICAL | ★★★★★ | THE OTHER PALACE | September 2025
A DECADE IN MOTION | ★★★★★ | SADLER’S WELLS THEATRE | September 2025
THE POLTERGEIST | ★★★★★ | ARCOLA THEATRE | September 2025

 

 

DARKFIELD

DARKFIELD

DARKFIELD

BAD LADS

★★★★★

UK Tour

BAD LADS

Live Theatre

★★★★★

“Raynor and Yorke have deeply electric acting chemistry”

‘Bad Lads’ by Graeae Productions, in association with Live Theatre, is a powerful, understated, and captivating production exploring the real story of the young men held at Medomsley Youth Detention Centre in County Durham during the 1980s. Writer Mike Kenny presents a short, sharp, shock of a piece which exploring a convening of protagonist Jackie’s present and younger self and his time spent at Medomsley, alongside strongly integrated BSL interpretation. Created from a story by Jimmy Coffey, and testimonies from boys who were witness to and victims of large-scale abuse, ‘Bad Lads’ uniquely and boldly shares a heart-breaking story of tragic injustice and oppression.

Set between the present day and the thick of the Thatcher government’s “short, sharp, shock” policy which was advertised as a method of correcting defiant and wayward boys, ‘Bad Lads’ movingly captures the dark underbelly of institutional silence, corruption, and abuse. Jenny Sealey’s direction is breath-takingly simple, effect, and stark. Her direction pairs excellently with the straight-forward magic of Kenny’s script. Their work feels both straight-to-the-point yet never spoon-feeding, asking deeply what it takes to speak up against abuse after decades of being silenced.

A conversation between the “three Jackies”, the script tightly sifts through a hard-to-reckon past, and envisions a chilling sentence endured by young Jackie. As Danny Raynor, playing older Jackie, pieces together the puzzle of his abuse, Robin Paley Yorke, playing his younger counterpart, meets him with devastatingly knowing glances as he lives through their shared trauma. Raynor and Yorke have deeply electric acting chemistry, overlaying their cyclical dialogue and portraying a convincing performance of the same man changed by years of repressing his very difficult past. Their shared boyish humour, as well as their pain, fuels a constantly riveting performance. The show gorgeously explores an intergenerational conversation with the self, from the perspective of someone who had endured abuse at Medomsley, re-awakened by police enquires four decades on.

Craig Painting’s BSL interpretation and movement is beyond staggering. The expressiveness and deep emotion conveyed without a moment’s rest ties the connection between Yorke and Raynor together so wholly. The trio have the audience hanging on their every potent word and gesture, as they sink into the discomfort and trauma of the show’s revelations. Jacob Coleman’s movement direction consistently sheds light the horrors of the Medomsley boy’s experiences without overstepping into disrespect, leading with simplicity, clarity, and the strong stage presence of the three actors to speak for themselves. Motifs sink their teeth into the audience’s imagination and solidify perfectly as Coleman lets ambiguity and carefully considered gesture deliver the loud cry for justice the piece seeks to evoke. Aided by Virginie Taylor’s effective and engaging captions and video design, ‘Bad Lads’ provides an accessible, striking, and resounding message of urgence to push for accountability and recognition.

The simple yet effective beauty of this show is supported massively by Lucía Sánchez’s lighting, and Roma Yagnik’s sound designs, which integrate hauntingly with the bare staging. Moments where additional set are aided by lighting and sound stand out so effectively because of sparing props, set, and additional technical elements. The technical features of ‘Bad Lads’ are close to perfection.

Alongside the forceful gut-punch of acting performances, direction, and technical cohesion, ‘Bad Lads’ also sets a commendable tone across the venue for signposting resources. The respectful messaging and handling of ‘Bad Lads’ challenging themes, set a poignantly high standard for audience care, as well as care for those the piece shares the overlooked and important story of. The whole team should be highly commended for their excellent vision, tenderness, and delivery.



BAD LADS

Live Theatre then UK Tour continues

Reviewed on 7th October 2025

by Molly Knox

Photography by Von Fox


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

DOGS ON THE METRO | ★★★★★ | May 2025
PRESENT | ★★★★ | December 2024
GWYNETH GOES SKIING | ★★★★ | November 2024
ST MAUD | ★★★ | October 2024

 

 

BAD LADS

BAD LADS

BAD LADS