REVIEW: All is wellness in ‘Apple Cider Vinegar’ 

REVIEW: All is wellness in ‘Apple Cider Vinegar’ 
Kaitlyn Dever as Belle in 'Apple Cider Vinegar.' (Supplied)
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Updated 13 February 2025

REVIEW: All is wellness in ‘Apple Cider Vinegar’ 

REVIEW: All is wellness in ‘Apple Cider Vinegar’ 
  • Netflix drama is based on a shocking real-life story 

LONDON: At the start of each of the six episodes of “Apple Cider Vinegar,” one of the main characters looks directly into the camera and says: “This is a true story based on a lie.” It’s a quick way of getting viewers up to speed with the tale of a pair of young Australian women, Belle Gibson (Kaitlyn Dever) and Milla Blake (Alycia Debnam-Carey), who dominated the early days of Instagram and were at the forefront of the emergence of the online wellness movement.  




Kaitlyn Dever as Belle in 'Apple Cider Vinegar.' (Supplied)

Belle (a real person) and Milla (based on entrepreneur Jessica Ainscough) both espouse the use of alternative healing therapies to beat their own cancer diagnoses, and as a result garner massive online followings during the nascent days of influencer culture. The kicker, however, is that Milla’s cancer is very real, and very documented, while Belle’s is quite the opposite. Acknowledging this from the very first episode, director Jeffrey Walker smartly levels the playing field — whether you’re familiar with the real-world story or not, the secret at the center of Belle’s web of lies, and the business empire that was built upon it, adds a dramatic heft and sense of satisfying inevitability to “Apple Cider Vinegar,” even as the show’s timeline leaps forward and backwards with abandon. 

In addition to following Belle and Milla, the show also focuses on Lucy — a cancer patient who is one of Belle’s most ardent followers — and Chanelle, Milla’s friend who later becomes Belle’s assistant. But Walker never strays far from the central conceit: Belle’s fascinating and horrifying propensity to lie her way into more trouble knows no bounds, and no lie is too extreme for a young woman who is clearly very troubled.  




Kaitlyn Dever as Belle in 'Apple Cider Vinegar.' (Supplied)

Dever deftly avoids painting Belle as a pantomime villain, but also leans into the malice bubbling just beneath the personable surface. Debnam-Carey’s Milla is an altogether different part — while there’s no subterfuge, there is a frighteningly naïve lack of understanding of the power Milla wields over family and followers. 

“Apple Cider Vinegar” relies on its powerhouse leads, but it’s also a carefully considered cautionary tale that recounts a fascinating period of our recent history. It’s concise, hard-hitting and, having emerged with very little fanfare, reminiscent of the best Netflix sleeper hits. 


Art Basel Qatar will pay tribute to region’s ‘culture of gathering’

Art Basel Qatar will pay tribute to region’s ‘culture of gathering’
Updated 08 November 2025

Art Basel Qatar will pay tribute to region’s ‘culture of gathering’

Art Basel Qatar will pay tribute to region’s ‘culture of gathering’
  • Focus on community, director Vincenzo De Bellis tells Arab News
  • 84 artists, 87 galleries from Mideast, Asia, Americas and Europe

DOHA: Art Basel, the international contemporary art fair, will make its Gulf debut in Doha from Feb. 5 to 7 next year featuring 84 artist presentations by 87 galleries. 

Art Basel Qatar is a partnership between Art Basel, its parent company MCH Group, Qatar Sports Investments, and QC+, a strategic and creative collective specializing in cultural commerce.

Vincenzo De Bellis, chief artistic officer and global director of Art Basel Fairs, told Arab News at a recent press briefing in Doha that the event will reflect the location’s culture.

“The first thing we started thinking was how we can do this differently from the other fairs.

Attendees at the Art Basel Qatar media briefing. (Supplied)

“Because the region, in our opinion, asks for a different format to begin with, a format where the culture of gathering together, being together, is really part of the concept.

“So, I wouldn’t call it a challenge in that case. It was different from what we do, but it was an opportunity.”

Egyptian artist Wael Shawky has been appointed as the artistic director of Art Basel Qatar.

Shawky and a committee will eschew the traditional booth model in favor of an open-format exhibition in which artist presentations respond to a central curatorial theme of “Becoming.”

De Bellis said: “We’ve appointed a selection committee, composed of both international and regional experts, and experts both in contemporary and more modern art.

“By doing this, we cover a lot of both the artistic intentions, conceptual, and also the cultural specificity of the region.”

The fair will unfold across two key venues, M7 and the Doha Design District, as well as selected public sites in Msheireb Downtown Doha, the city’s creative and cultural hub.

Both the format and curatorial direction will bring the concepts of storytelling and dialogue to the fore, offering new ways for galleries, artists, and collectors to engage while maintaining market relevance.

More than half of the artists presented in this first edition hail from the region, including Etel Adnan, Ali Banisadr, Simone Fattal, Ali Cherri, Meriem Bennani and Iman Issa.

Galleries from across the region will participate, including those with outposts in Gulf states including Qatar, the UAE, and .

The wider Middle East and Asia will also be represented, including galleries from Lebanon, Turkiye, Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia and India.

-based galleries participating include Hafez Gallery based in Jeddah and Riyadh, Cairo’s Gallery Misr, Tunis’ Le Violon Bleu, Beirut’s Saleh Barakat Gallery, and Dubai’s Tabari Artspace.

International galleries from across Europe, the Americas and Asia will also participate, including Acquavella Galleries, Gagosian, Hauser & Wirth, Pace Gallery, David Zwirner and White Cube.

Noah Horowitz, CEO Art Basel. (Supplied)

Art Basel’s CEO Noah Harrowitz said: “​​Growing the market for galleries, artists, collectors, and patrons around the world is core to Art Basel’s mission.

“So at its heart, Art Basel Qatar is about expanding the conversation and catalyzing the opportunity so present here on the ground in Doha.

“By bringing artists, galleries, and collectors from across the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia, together with Art Basel’s global community and expertise, will create new possibilities for how art is seen, shared, and ultimately collected.”