The novel is a brilliant psychological thriller, and several other things as well — a very quiet love story, a narrative of a remarkable friendship between two men, and an exploration of the corruption rampant in Argentine politics in the late 60s and 70s.
As a dancer, Pina Bausch was the presiding spirit of speechlessness. She had the macabre body of an anorexic, but her matchstick arms communicated entire inner worlds.
Pina, a 3-D documentary by Wim Wenders. In select U.S. theaters now, opening in Boston at the AMC Boston Common January 20, 2012.
By Debra Cash.
What happens when a celebration is transformed, by awful necessity, into a memorial?
German filmmaker Wim Wenders had been discussing a collaborative project with his friend, choreographer Pina Bausch, for 20 years. She regularly teased him about how procrastination and competing offers were burying his good intentions. It was one of those “one day we’ll do it” dreams—we all have them—that never seemed to get off the ground.
Then, in 2007, Wenders caught a screening of the 3-D concert film made by the rock band U2. Wenders would later say that he was elated. Finally, here were the tools he felt he needed to do justice to Bausch’s work. The two artists mapped out a proposed repertory and scouted for locations—German theaters, windowed galleries, urban traffic circles shadowed by monorail lines, the edge of an open pit with a long view to the horizon—and scheduled a shoot featuring the dancers of Tanztheater Wuppertal, which Bausch had led since 1973. Continue reading »
Fuse Theater Review: A Visual Artist Looks at “Red”Arts Fuse Critic (and visual artist) Franklin Einspruch reviews “Red,” a drama about Mark Rothko, and doesn’t like what he sees. |
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Fuse TV Review: Thoughts on the Golden Globes and Its TV AwardsArts Fuse TV Critic Molly Jay thinks that the Golden Globes telecast was a dud, but that the group’s TV awards were mainly on target. |
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Coming Attractions in Jazz: Winter PreviewIs it winter? You wouldn’t know it by the weather, or by the rich array of jazz performances coming up between now and the end of March. |
Fuse Concert Review: Concord Chamber Players and Jessica ZhouIn a nice twist, no piece on the Concord Chamber Players program was written before 1907, and that oldest piece came from a fine composer, Camille Saint-Saëns, whose music has fallen somewhat by the wayside since his death in 1922. |
Fuse Stage Interview: Thomas Derrah on the Appeal of “Red”“Red” is about creativity and destruction, Apollonian rigor and Dionysian instinct, fathers and sons, love and rejection, life and death. |
Fuse Theater Review: A Rewarding “Red”“Red” is a drama about the modern artist and his place in art history: at its center, painter Mark Rothko confronts fame and the commoditization of creativity in the world of contemporary art. |
Fuse Concert Review: Admiring New York’s Green Mountain ProjectGreen Mountain Project’s performance was music making at its best, historically informed, musically revealing, and sensitively and energetically performed — one could not ask for more. |
Coming Attractions in Theater: January 2012The year kicks off with few unusual productions — companies are depending on proven New York hits, such as the Yasmina Reza duo, the Tony award-approved “Red,” and “Green Eyes,” though the Tennessee Williams curio tantalizes. |
Coming Attractions: Set the Tempo for 2012 — Music to Kick off the New Year in Boston and BeyondWhile many critics decried 2011 as a musical wasteland, New England residents can allow auld acquaintance to be forgot in 2012 with the cornucopia of music that’s coming to the Northeast. Warm up with these winter events … |
Coming Attractions in Film: January 2012This month and into February there is a treasure trove of rare treats and great opportunities to see all kinds of film around New England. |









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