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Reçu aujourd’hui — 31 octobre 2025 The Guardian

Australia v India: second men’s Twenty20 international – live

31 octobre 2025 à 10:56
  • Updates from the T20I at the MCG in Melbourne

  • Any thoughts? Get in touch with an email

Hazlewood has had Shubman Gill in all sorts from the very first ball and sends the opener on his way soon after. Gill tries to lift a wide ball straight over mid-off but picks out Mitch Marsh tracking back.

2nd over: India 18-0 (Gill 4, Abhishek 14) SIX! Abhishek Sharma lights up the MCG as he takes 14 runs from the four balls he faces in the Xavier Bartlett over. A swipe across the line picks up a couple, then Abhishek charges down the pitch to crack the first boundary of the innings through cover. A rattled Bartlett overpitches and allows the India opener two more past mid-on but he saves his best for last with a powerful drive over cover for six.

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© Photograph: William West/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: William West/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: William West/AFP/Getty Images

Slot targets Liverpool recovery; weekend team news and previews: football – live

⚽ All the latest news heading into the weekend’s action
Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail David

Liverpool: The defending champions take on Villa this weekend before hosting Real Madrid in the Champions League. Their final game before the November international break will be away to Manchester City. Here is what Slot said on the challenge Villa posses:

If you don’t win the beginning, people say: ‘oh maybe they don’t have the same team as last season’ and then they start winning and everything is positive again. Where with us, it’s exactly the opposite.

We’re both on the same points, apart from Arsenal many teams are in and around the same points. It shows how hard the Premier League is.

Ryan [Gravenberch] trained with us yesterday. The other two [Curtis Jones and Alexander Isak] not yet.

In the end bit of an injury, things can slow down. Let’s see where the other two are.

This is the last question that I was expecting.

My focus is completely on getting Liverpool back to winning ways. That is my first answer and my second answer, contract talks, if they are even there, we never speak about this here.

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© Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images

© Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images

© Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images

Ukraine reports fresh Russian attacks and says Moscow has used ‘secret’ missile in recent months – Europe live

31 octobre 2025 à 10:38

The development of the 9M729 cruise missile prompted Donald Trump to abandon a nuclear arms control pact with Moscow during his first term

The UN humanitarian coordinator on Ukraine warned that the conflict “feels increasingly like a protracted war,” with all hopes of a swift resolution fading away.

“We have been through phases this year where there was cautious optimism that it might end right now. On the ground, it doesn’t feel at all like it’s ending any time soon,” he said.

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© Photograph: State Emergency Service of Ukraine/Reuters

© Photograph: State Emergency Service of Ukraine/Reuters

© Photograph: State Emergency Service of Ukraine/Reuters

Inside the secret psychology of horror games – and why we can’t help pushing play

31 octobre 2025 à 10:25

It’s not just what we hear and see that scares us, according to those behind many of video gaming’s modern horror classics

The sound came first. In a San Francisco Bart train tunnel, Don Veca took his recorder and captured a train’s metallic roar – “like demons in agony, beautifully ugly,” he remembers. That recording became one of the most chilling sounds in 2008’s Dead Space.

“We dropped that screeching, industrial noise at full volume right after the vacuum silence – creating one of the game’s most jarring sonic contrasts,” Veca, who made horror history as the audio director for the Dead Space games, recalls. “Our game designer hated it – but the boss loved it. Over time, it’s become iconic.”

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© Illustration: Mob Entertainment

© Illustration: Mob Entertainment

© Illustration: Mob Entertainment

Era of free trade and investment is over, Canada’s PM tells Apec summit

31 octobre 2025 à 10:13

Mark Carney warns Asia-Pacific leaders global economy undergoing profound change, as China’s president mounts defence of free trade

The Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, has warned that the era of free trade and investment that formed the foundations of the postwar global economy has ended.

In a stark message to Asia-Pacific leaders at the Apec summit in South Korea on Friday, Carney said rules-based open trade no longer worked in a global economy that was undergoing one of its most profound periods of change since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.

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© Photograph: Yonhap News Agency/Reuters

© Photograph: Yonhap News Agency/Reuters

© Photograph: Yonhap News Agency/Reuters

‘Extreme heebie-jeebies’: writers on their scariest movies of all time

For Halloween, Guardian writers pick their most terrifying films ever – from The Shining and The Descent to The Strangers

“Sometimes one can’t help … imagining things.” Truman Capote helped to adapt Henry James’s ghost story The Turn of the Screw into 1961’s The Innocents, directed by Jack Clayton, which remains one of the most disturbing of all scary movies. To recall the rush of stomach-twisting fear provoked by this film, I just need one glimpse of the sweating face or shaking hands of Deborah Kerr. She plays a governess to two traumatised children in a remote house where life is so fragile that the petals fall from the roses, mysterious figures appear in the grounds and ominous screeching sounds crack the night. Freddie Francis’s shadowy, black-and-white cinematography, with all those flickering candles, sets a spooky tone, but it’s the soundtrack, using uncanny electronic noises by Daphne Oram, that really needles into your brain. Kerr’s Miss Giddens disintegrates rapidly, unable to trust her own horrifying visions, rapidly suspecting her youthful charges are possessed by evil spirits. “Oh, look, a lovely spider!” exclaims sweet little Flora. “And it’s eating a butterfly.” Pamela Hutchinson

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© Photograph: Maximum Film/Alamy

© Photograph: Maximum Film/Alamy

© Photograph: Maximum Film/Alamy

The nature extinction crisis is mirrored by one in our own bodies. Both have huge implications for health

31 octobre 2025 à 10:00

Modern life is waging a war against ecosystems around us and inside us. Keeping our own microbes healthy is another reason to demand action to preserve the natural world

Human bodies are like cities, teeming with microcitizens – vast communities of viruses, fungi and bacteria that live all over our skin and inside us. Unsung public servants help us digest food, regulate our immune system, defend against pathogens, and keep hormones in check. Together, they make up what we call the human microbiome.

Most people have probably heard of the gut microbiome, but different microbes thrive all over our bodies – in our nostrils, on our feet, in our eyes. They are slightly different, like boroughs are composed of different communities of people. Ninety per cent of cells in our body are microbes, and “clouds” of bacteria come off someone’s body as they enter a room. We are all walking ecosystems, picking up and shedding material as we move through life.

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© Photograph: Ruben Earth/Getty Images

© Photograph: Ruben Earth/Getty Images

© Photograph: Ruben Earth/Getty Images

What – if anything – did Asian countries get out of Donald Trump’s whirlwind tour?

31 octobre 2025 à 09:15

Uncertainty surrounds the signing of this week’s trade deals amid the failure to secure reciprocity from the US to cut tariffs

On Donald Trump’s whirlwind tour of Asia – which involved stops in Malaysia, Japan and Korea – the US president triumphantly collected new trade deals from countries hoping for a reduction in the tariffs he slapped on them earlier this year.

However – China aside – analysts were left asking just how much Asian nations got out of it.

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© Photograph: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

© Photograph: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

© Photograph: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Snocaps: Snocaps review – Katie and Allison Crutchfield reunite with a little help from MJ Lenderman

31 octobre 2025 à 09:04

(Anti)
Waxahatchee and her twin sister are joined by Lenderman and Brad Cook for an album of headstrong, tender Americana about chasing integrity and conviction

Snocaps sound exactly like the sum of their parts. A new band for fans of headstrong, tender Americana, Alabama twins Katie and Allison Crutchfield (of Waxahatchee and Swearin’ respectively) are in a new band together for the first time since scrappy, beloved PS Eliot retired in 2011. Backed by indie guitar star MJ Lenderman and storied alt-rock producer Brad Cook, Snocaps is a family record in more ways than one: the four have a tangled history of making music together, giving this one-off collection the lived-in feel of a band five albums deep.

With no need for introductions, Snocaps starts with an exercise in trust. We’re in the car, Allison’s at the wheel, and she is daring the rest of the band to close their eyes: “I got a pedal on the floor or I’m slammin’ on the brakes,” she quips, setting the pace for an album about chasing integrity and conviction, told through airborne melodies and unpretentious, freewheeling guitar.

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© Photograph: Chris Black

© Photograph: Chris Black

© Photograph: Chris Black

Having a ball-player is important but England also need a bit of beef, and that’s Freeman | Ugo Monye

31 octobre 2025 à 09:00

Centre pairing of Northampton duo Tommy Freeman and Fraser Dingwall is unconventional but exciting, as is the depth of England’s squad

Optimism is often manufactured at the start of a campaign. Everyone goes in believing they can win every game, but there is a mood of true optimism around England before the autumn series. Considering they have won their last seven matches, had their best finish to a Six Nations for five years, and then won a summer series in Argentina, I think it’s fair to have confidence. Argentina beat the British & Irish Lions and England won there despite having 13 players away in Australia, plus one of the coaches.

The amount of Prem players excelling and the level in that competition also makes me excited for what England can achieve in November, starting with Australia on Saturday. Steve Borthwick is growing into the job and is more confident in what he’s doing: turbulence may not be the right word for the early days of his tenure, but I think people expected more. As fans we want immediate results, but coaches tend to have a “helicopter” view and understand the direction of travel.

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© Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

© Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

© Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

Lily Allen’s new album shows the pain behind the ‘cool girl’ myth – that’s why women are obsessed with it | Gaby Hinsliff

31 octobre 2025 à 09:00

The singer’s lyrics about an open marriage gone sour resonate with many women her age. They’re sick of pretending to be fine with relationships that are not

Lily Allen was always an enviably cool girl.

When she first burst on to the music scene nearly two decades ago at 21, it was with a breezy, don’t-care London swagger. Her songs concealed big, painful feelings under flippant, deadpan lyrics and deceptively sweet melodies, which made them easier to swallow. Even this summer, when she talked on her thrillingly unfiltered podcast Miss Me? about having lost count of exactly how many abortions she’d had, she sang the words to the tune of Frank Sinatra’s My Way.

Gaby Hinsliff is a Guardian columnist

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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© Photograph: Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images

Standing on their own: Cricket World Cup highlights drive to reclaim public space for Indian women | Emma John

31 octobre 2025 à 09:00

As India’s most popular sport, cricket offers a forum to help change attitudes – educating men and empowering women

If there was any better sight than India’s cricketers celebrating victory over Australia on Thursday, it was that of their supporters doing the same. For several hours, the nerves of the 35,000 spectators in Mumbai’s DY Patil Stadium – most wearing Indian blue – had jangled in sympathy. As the home team booked themselves into Sunday’s Cricket World Cup final, the TV cameras picked out the men and women in the stands caught up in the flood of delight and relief. It was more than a moment of triumph – it was a vision of solidarity.

But let’s leave the stands, now, and head to the city streets of Indore, the largest city in the state of Madhya Pradesh. It’s here that a pair of Australia players were sexually harassed as they walked from their hotel to a nearby cafe, the morning after last week’s game against England. They reported the incident, there was an immediate investigation, and a man was shortly arrested: a swift, proactive piece of police work. Which begged the question: how much interest would the authorities have shown if it had happened to anyone other than two high-profile, foreign athletes?

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© Photograph: Matt Roberts-ICC/ICC/Getty Images

© Photograph: Matt Roberts-ICC/ICC/Getty Images

© Photograph: Matt Roberts-ICC/ICC/Getty Images

Chess: Magnus Carlsen triumphs at historic Champions Showdown in St Louis

31 octobre 2025 à 09:00

Norway’s world No 1 beat the world champion, Gukesh Dommaraju, 5.5-0.5, and also edged the world Nos 2 and 3

The four-player Champions Showdown in St Louis was a historic event, a quadrangular tournament of the super-elite who met each other six times in three days.

Magnus Carlsen was the favourite, but after scoring 3.5/6 on the first day the Norwegian expressed dissatisfaction with his own performance: “I’m not feeling good at all. I scored about two points more than I should have, and I’m happy with that. My level of play was extremely poor.”

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© Photograph: Lennart Ootes/Lennart Ootes/FIDE

© Photograph: Lennart Ootes/Lennart Ootes/FIDE

© Photograph: Lennart Ootes/Lennart Ootes/FIDE

‘I’ve played a lot of sneery bastards’: Roger Allam on bad singing, big paydays and Elgar’s level of ‘gitacity’

31 octobre 2025 à 09:00

He launched a thousand memes as the beleaguered Tory MP in The Thick of It, and starred in the original production of Les Misérables. Now the actor is making not-so-sweet music in the Alan Bennett-scripted film The Choral. But there are plenty of things he draws the line at …

A key plot point of The Choral revolves around Roger Allam singing badly. This is the man who originated the role of Javert in Les Misérables back in 1985, who was Olivier-nominated for his performance in Cy Coleman’s musical City of Angels and who once contemplated a career as an opera singer.

Talk me through that, I say: the bad singing. We’re at his home in southwest London. He’s very busy, filming, but a small window of time was found to meet – did I mind coming to his house? No, of course I didn’t, and here I am on a blustery Monday morning, perched on a chair next to him, sat in the corner on the sofa in a comfortable but anonymous front room looking on to a leafy street.

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© Photograph: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images for IMDb

© Photograph: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images for IMDb

© Photograph: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images for IMDb

Strauss, Dvořák and Glazunov album review – packs a dramatic punch

31 octobre 2025 à 09:00

Bamberger Symphoniker/Hrůša
(Accentus Music)

Jakub Hrůša’s absorbing treatment gives life to three late-19th-century works reflecting on the notion of heroism

This absorbing release on the Leipzig-based Accentus label is a reminder that the Royal Ballet and Opera’s new music director, Jakub Hrůša, has for the last nine years excelled in orchestral music as chief conductor of the Bamberg Symphony. The programme juxtaposes three works composed in the final decades of the 19th century, each reflecting in different ways on the notion of a hero, or what is meant by a hero’s journey.

A Hero’s Song was Dvořák’s final tone poem, a 20-minute micro-symphony in which intrepid determination gives way to mourning, martial conflict and finally hope. It’s full of amiable melodies and, in Hrůša’s hands, it packs a dramatic punch. It’s followed by a compelling discovery: Glazunov’s symphonic elegy To the Memory of a Hero, composed when he was 20. Advancing with sombre tread, and boasting a pair of instantly memorable themes, it is handsomely shaped by conductor and orchestra.

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© Photograph: Marian Lenhard

© Photograph: Marian Lenhard

© Photograph: Marian Lenhard

Attention by Anne Enright review – sparkling reflections on life and literature

31 octobre 2025 à 08:00

Unabashed and morally generous, the Booker winner writes like a sharp, funny, fallen angel

In addition to producing eight novels over the past 30 years, Anne Enright has always written nonfiction around the edges. This has mostly taken the form of essays for the literary pages of the NYRB, the LRB and, indeed, the Guardian. Attention is a collection of 24 of the best, each with a new brief introduction by Enright herself. The work is culled mostly from the past 10 years, with the latest dated “Autumn 2025”, which suggests that she was still blowing on the ink as it went to press.

A decade ago most of these pieces would probably have been called “personal essays”, but that now seems redundant. Everything is personal with Enright, which is what makes you want to read her even on subjects that don’t initially appeal. The cocaine trade in Honduras, say, or the production of Samuel Beckett’s Happy Days in a sodden field in the Aran Islands. And just when you worry that things might, actually, be getting a bit too fine-grained, such as the revelation that on holiday her husband likes to study menus carefully before choosing a restaurant, while she is more likely to dive in and scream for chips, Enright lobs in a line that explodes her text. Leaving her beloved Venice after a holiday with said husband, she is struck by the thought that the next time she visits, “I do not know if the disaster will have happened or not, because one day it will happen. One of us will die; the other will remain.” And just like that we are taken to the deepest, darkest mystery not just of Enright’s marriage, but of the kind of relationship that we might long for ourselves.

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© Photograph: Ruth Connolly

© Photograph: Ruth Connolly

© Photograph: Ruth Connolly

Woman unable to board flight to Italy because of ill child has benefit stopped

31 octobre 2025 à 08:00

Family denied entry at gate after one of their children had epileptic fit – but HMRC said she boarded one-way flight

A woman has had her child benefit stopped after booking a holiday to Italy because HMRC inferred she had emigrated – even though she and her family did not board the flight.

Sally, her three children and her partner were going on holiday to Italy last July, but were refused boarding after one of the children had an epileptic fit at the departure gate.

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© Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

© Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

© Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

Hamas hands over bodies of two Israeli hostages amid fragile Gaza truce

Par :Reuters
31 octobre 2025 à 00:00

Remains of Amiram Cooper and Sahar Baruch returned to Israel for burial after identification process, Israeli military said

Hamas handed over two bodies of deceased Israeli hostages on Thursday, a day after the tenuous Gaza ceasefire was shaken by deadly Israeli strikes across the strip.

The bodies of the hostages Amiram Cooper and Sahar Baruch were returned to Israel for burial after an identification process was completed, the Israeli military said late on Thursday.

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© Photograph: Ramadan Abed/Reuters

© Photograph: Ramadan Abed/Reuters

© Photograph: Ramadan Abed/Reuters

After a year of street protests, Serbia’s students split on what should come next

31 octobre 2025 à 08:31

As a radicalised generation presses its calls for political change, a debate has opened up over whether to join battle by the ballot box

Midway through a 16-day, 250-mile (400km) march from Novi Pazar to Novi Sad, Inas Hodžić was still remarkably energetic. Like thousands of other Serbian students, he was making his way to the city which, last autumn, become the scene of national tragedy.

Sixteen people were killed when the newly renovated canopy of Novi Sad’s main railway station collapsed on 1 November 2024, a disaster that critics say exposed much more than faulty construction and sparked Serbia’s largest youth-led protest movement since the fall of Slobodan Milošević.

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© Photograph: Darko Vojinović/AP

© Photograph: Darko Vojinović/AP

© Photograph: Darko Vojinović/AP

Pluribus to All’s Fair: the seven best shows to stream this week

31 octobre 2025 à 08:00

Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan is back with a gripping, funny, head-spinner of a show, while Kim Kardashian stars in a blazingly camp drama about divorce lawyers. Plus, the thrilling return of Squid Game: The Challenge

Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan returns with a gripping, funny, bleak, bewildering head-spinner of a series. It begins with a mysterious communication from outer space. This turns out to be an earthly glimpse of extraterrestrial technology: a psychic glue, binding humanity together. Great news, right? If you are one of the few people across the world seemingly immune to this zombified bliss, not so much. The superb Rhea Seehorn stars as Carol Sturka, a cranky writer of bad, extremely successful historical romances and, reluctantly, the keeper of the flame of righteous human cynicism. Pluribus establishes and maintains a tone all of its own – dark humour, oddball surrealism and existential horror.
Apple TV, from Friday 7 November

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© Photograph: Anna Kooris/Apple

© Photograph: Anna Kooris/Apple

© Photograph: Anna Kooris/Apple

Kenya’s growing towns are leaving elephants with nowhere to go

31 octobre 2025 à 08:00

In this week’s newsletter: As settlements expand across northern Kenya, people and elephants are increasingly clashing over land, food and water

It is remarkably hard to see an elephant in the wild. In Oldonyiro, northern Kenya, they pass through the settlement almost every night. Piles of dung appear metres from the primary school and local church each morning, where smooth circles have been padded into the earth by the enormous beasts shuffling past in the dark.

But when I went looking for them in September, they were nowhere to be found.

More after this week’s most important reads.

How a radical experiment to bring a forest into a preschool transformed children’s health

‘White-knuckled wolf spider’ thought lost is rediscovered on Isle of Wight

Carnivorous ‘death ball’ sponge among new species found in depths of Southern Ocean

Can communities living side by side with wildlife beat Africa’s national parks at conservation?

Nairobi’s lions are almost encircled by the city. A Maasai community offers a key corridor out

World’s landscapes may soon be ‘devoid of wild animals’, says nature photographer

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© Photograph: Edwin Ndeke/The Guardian

© Photograph: Edwin Ndeke/The Guardian

© Photograph: Edwin Ndeke/The Guardian

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