By the end, any losses have come out in the wash. No one on stage has been seriously changed or challenged, and nor have we. As morals go, “You win some, you lose some” feels like a poor return on an audience’s investment.
Critics' Reviews
Wolves on Road review – high-tempo crypto tale offers poor return
What Daniel Bailey’s production captures really well is the energy, enthusiasm and underlying societal disaffection of the two puppyish young leads – after directing West End transfer smash Red Pitch, Bailey feels like the absolute go to guy for ...
Wolves on Road review — how to make cryptocurrency into ebullient theatre
On Amelia Jane Hankin’s compact set, in which blocks are shifted around to evoke different settings — perhaps a visual reference to blockchain — we watch as the lure of DGX exposes the vulnerability in each character. Savagely humorous, the pla...
Tessema’s first produced play, House of Ife, also at the Bush, was a close family drama also set among the Ethiopian diaspora in Britain. Its plot was wayward while its characters and their melting-pot London argot felt blisteringly authentic. Her...
Review: Wolves On Road (Bush Theatre)
There is much to admire about Wolves On Road with its content every bit as ambitious as its protagonists. When it’s at its best, it shows signs of brilliance but sadly struggles to maintain that level and suffers from a dip as the narrative and mes...
Wolves on Road – Bush Theatre | Review
It’s not clear, at least not to me, whether this is meant to be a play about crypto (every single character has a reason to express strong emotions and opinions on it at some point or other) more than it is meant to be about family dynamics and cro...
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