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Stephen Arnell
CS Lewis in 1947 [Pic: Scan of photograph by Arthur Strong]
Features / 28 April 2025
28 April 2025

After a ruinous run at Tolkien, the streaming platforms are moving on to Narnia — a naff mix of religious allegory, colonial attitudes, and thinly veiled prejudices that is beyond rescuing, writes STEPHEN ARNELL

Elon Musk listens as President Donald Trump meets with India
Features / 18 February 2025
18 February 2025
STEPHEN ARNELL sees parallels between the US tech billionaire and HG Wells’s literary creation
David Lynch pictured in 2007
Features / 7 February 2025
7 February 2025
David Lynch’s classic 1980 film The Elephant Man has some cruel parallels with Britain in 2025, argues STEPHEN ARNELL
 Photograph of Theodore Roosevelt, 1904
Features / 8 January 2025
8 January 2025
Between Musk’s bizarre British power grab and Trump’s overtly corporate agenda, modern robber barons face a growing backlash — and history shows how determined leaders can tame ultra-rich excess, writes STEPHEN ARNELL
Thomas Cromwell in 1532 painted by Hans Holbein the Younger
Features / 21 December 2024
21 December 2024
There is no denying Thomas Cromwell's positive and progressive impact on English politics, argues STEPHEN ARNELL
Oliver Twist asks for more
Features / 9 December 2024
9 December 2024
From Raab to Rees-Mogg, STEPHEN ARNELL observes how modern Conservatives yearn for the return of the brutal institutions where the poor were imprisoned and punished for their plight
SAS founder David Stirling, pictured in north Africa during
Features / 26 November 2024
26 November 2024
How the BBC’s SAS: Rogue Heroes is pure public schoolboy fantasy – STEPHEN ARNELL examines the real founder of the Special Air Service, aristocrat Archibald David Stirling
Michael Parkinson presented the controversial show
Features / 28 October 2024
28 October 2024
STEPHEN ARNELL remembers 32 years ago when a spooky hoax by Auntie Beeb went a step too far
EMBARRASSMENT: An 1824 cartoon of a gouty, obese George IV r
Features / 11 October 2024
11 October 2024
Boris Johnson’s poorly written memoir confirms his reputation as a prolific liar and deluded fantasist — bringing to mind striking parallels with George IV, from narcissism to womanising, observes STEPHEN ARNELL
BBC Broadcasting House in London, January 21, 2020
Features / 3 September 2024
3 September 2024
Auntie’s offices are still packed to the rafters with private school-educated appointees, says STEPHEN ARNELL
Rock band, Hard-Fi, perform at the Love Music Hate Racism fe
Features / 22 August 2024
22 August 2024
STEPHEN ARNELL hails the comeback of RAR for the 21st century in the form of Love Music Hate Racism
Features / 14 August 2024
14 August 2024
From Lee Anderson's sad parliamentary antics to Tommy Robinson's lager-soaked rallies, STEPHEN ARNELL skewers the hollow bravado of Britain's resurgent right and looks at how mass mobilisation can counter its influence
Features / 1 August 2024
1 August 2024
As the Conservative Party struggles to find its next leader, STEPHEN ARNELL offers a sardonic tour through the rogues’ gallery of contenders and their less-than-inspiring qualifications
Jacob Rees-Mogg in the studio at GB News during his new show
Features / 23 July 2024
23 July 2024
With Meet the Rees-Moggs soon playing on Discovery+, STEPHEN ARNELL considers what kind of shows his fellow defenestrated MPs might best star in
Emperor Tiberius (left) and orator Cicero
Features / 6 June 2024
6 June 2024
There are strange similarities between the ancient emperors and today’s departing Tories, writes STEPHEN ARNELL
The Favourites of the Emperor Honorius (1883), by John Willi
Features / 20 May 2024
20 May 2024
Francis Ford Coppola’s latest film centred on a ‘New Rome’ gets STEPHEN ARNELL wondering about the similarities between lame-duck PM Sunak and one of the last Roman emperors, Honorius
NOT FROM THE EAST END: Gangster-obsessed Guy Ritchie
Features / 30 March 2024
30 March 2024
Guy Ritchie's latest Netflix series delves into the world of bent aristocrats, revealing the dark underbelly beneath their veneer of privilege. Here STEPHEN ARNELL takes a look at some of the real British toffs who engaged in criminal activity
Features / 2 March 2024
2 March 2024
As the currently whipless Tory MP Lee Anderson ponders whether to jump ship and pledge allegiance to the xenophobic upstart party Reform UK, STEPHEN ARNELL looks at a Blackshirted parallel from 93 years ago
Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Tr
Features / 2 February 2024
2 February 2024
Our home-grown quislings in the Tory scene are already scrambling to kiss The Donald's ring. A dreadful sight — but spare a thought for those actually in the US, and the potential for outright civil war, writes STEPHEN ARNELL
A post office sign in Aldwych, central London, January 11, 2
Features / 19 January 2024
19 January 2024
After the Horizon Post Office affair, STEPHEN ARNELL looks at Tory (and other) disasters worthy of being dramatised for the small screen
Features / 9 January 2024
9 January 2024
STEPHEN ARNELL looks to 2024, which will see 190 years since the Tolpuddle Martyrs and 200 years after the passing of the 1824 Vagrancy Act
A statue of Boris Johnson covered in oil
Features / 14 December 2023
14 December 2023
STEPHEN ARNELL looks at the historical practice of erasing the memory of reviled political leaders from ancient Rome to modern Westminster
FAILURE TO SEE THE OBVIOUS: Day one of the 2023 World Triath
Features / 23 November 2023
23 November 2023
It’s not rare to think politicians are full of it — but must we accept them making seas and rivers full of it too, asks STEPHEN ARNELL
Features / 9 November 2023
9 November 2023
STEPHEN ARNELL argues one side of the political spectrum is pushing British discourse towards the gutter
A sketch of the huge crowd in Newport in 1839 as it surround
Features / 4 November 2023
4 November 2023
Today marks 184 years since the greatest armed rebellion in 19th-century Britain when Chartist workers fought bloody gun battles with the police and army in the heart of industrial Wales, writes STEPHEN ARNELL
Horatio Bottomley at a WWI recruiting rally in Trafalgar Squ
Features / 13 October 2023
13 October 2023
The hugely influential newspaper editor, politician, orator and crook had a remarkable journey from poverty to Westminster and back — he was well ahead of his time, writes STEPHEN ARNELL