Coming Attractions: January 14 through 30 " What Will Light Your Fire
Arts Fuse critics select the best in film, dance, visual arts, theater, music, and author events for the coming weeks.
Arts Fuse critics select the best in film, dance, visual arts, theater, music, and author events for the coming weeks.
Henry Rollins insists on defining himself strictly on his own terms.
When an opportunity to celebrate USCO's pioneering work came along, I just had to curate it.
I love the way Blame captures the kaleidoscopic emotional experience of being a teenage girl.
Three incisive visions of what's to come from largish groups of committed musicians.
"Everything about the Holocaust already seems so thoroughly unreal, as if it no longer belongs to the experience of our generation, but to mythology..."
Steven Spielberg's political timing is nearly perfect, and so is his film.
Stanley Sagov never wants to play a piece the same way twice. He's always engaged in a "search for freshness."
What has Black Mirror been good for, beyond entertainment, if not drawing our attention to escalating social and technological perils?
Perhaps the theatre of millennials will resemble Reality TV, resistant to suggestive metaphor and the rewards of complex narration.
We have the obligation to look behind the music and the culture that glorified and perpetuated it.
Arts Fuse critics select the best in film, dance, visual arts, theater, music, and author events for the coming weeks.
I miss the precocious, mischievous, darkly cunning, and troubled characters Gary Oldman once portrayed so beautifully.
A quartet of critics serve up the highlights in dance for 2017.
By Timothy Francis Barry Another year of paging through new books, staring slack-jawed at the television with its now 400 channels (hoping for something to flicker into view that will engage…
Our theater critics pick some of the outstanding productions of the year.
I can unequivocally say this is the most masterful and beautiful film of the year.
Manhattan Beach feels acutely relevant despite being set in the past.
Best Food Writing 2017 presents, as the series always has, a veritable buffet of pleasurable reading for the foodie.
The range of recordings issued this year was remarkable, both in terms of their instrumentation and their artistic inspiration.
Our demanding critics choose the best (most disappointing) films of the year.
These institutions visually and physically reflected Portuguese art and culture.
Moviegoers who haven't thought about Tonya Harding in years may find themselves wondering if they may have judged her too harshly.
If you can accept yet another tour around a love triangle, Wonder Wheel is generally engaging and nearly always entertaining.
All of the pieces " and some of them are quite odd and incongruent " come together in Sense & Sensibility to become one.