krasznahorkai

Film Retrospective: Conmen and Catastrophe — The Works of Béla Tarr and László Krasznahorkai

Coming Attractions

Coming Attractions: April 12 Through 27 — What Will Light Your Fire

Our expert critics supply a guide to film, visual art, theater, author readings, television, and music. More offerings will be added as they come in.

The Arts Fuse Currents

Music

Book Review: Wilhelm Furtwängler in Wartime – Reflections on Ian Buruma’s “Stay Alive”

By Joseph Horowitz | April 16, 2026

If there is a through-line consolidating Ian Buruma’s account, it is the admonition: Do not rush to judgment.

Visual Arts

Book Review: “A Life of Peter Hujar and Paul Thek” — The Ascent of Two Queer Outsiders

By Trevor Fairbrother | April 14, 2026

For biographer Andrew Durbin, Peter Hujar and Paul Thek are historical figures from a lost era that he wants to discover on his own terms.

Film

Film Retrospective: Conmen and Catastrophe — The Works of Béla Tarr and László Krasznahorkai

By Peter Keough | April 16, 2026

A retrospective of four films by those two Hungarian artists unfolds as a monochromatic monolith of mud, misery, human folly, and inexorable corruption.

Books

Book Review: Wilhelm Furtwängler in Wartime – Reflections on Ian Buruma’s “Stay Alive”

By Joseph Horowitz | April 16, 2026

If there is a through-line consolidating Ian Buruma’s account, it is the admonition: Do not rush to judgment.

Poetry at The Arts Fuse

Weekly Feature: Poetry at The Arts Fuse

April 16, 2026

This week’s poem: James Cook’s “Suffering Is Not Special”

Dance

Dance Feature: Finding Comedy in Motion — Sara Juli and Alexander Davis Share the Stage

By Debra Cash | March 17, 2026

With autobiographical wryness on the menu, Sara Juli and Alexander David is a match made in performance art heaven.

Theater

Theater Review: “When Playwrights Kill” — A Wickedly Funny Backstage Farce About Art, Ego, and Desperation

By Martin Copenhaver | April 16, 2026

In this high-energy comedy of creative frustration, history—and hubris—repeat themselves to hilarious effect.

Television

Television Review: Still Unfair, Still Funny: “Malcolm in the Middle” Redux Finds Its Rhythm

By Sarah Osman | April 13, 2026

A surprisingly heartfelt reboot that revives the show’s chaotic charm, even if some of the family sparks are missing.

Podcasts

Short Fuse Podcast #87: A Library on Death Row

By Elizabeth Howard | March 26, 2026

Host Elizabeth Howard explores the importance of books for people incarcerated in Mississippi.

Short Fuses

April Short Fuses — Materia Critica

By Arts Fuse Editor | April 1, 2026

Each month, our arts critics — music, book, theater, dance, television, film, and visual arts — fire off a few brief reviews.

Spotlight

Music Commentary: Big Ears 2026 — Another View

By Rob Battles | April 10, 2026

A diary of shows attended – good, bad, and indifferent — at this year’s Big Ears Festival, as well as comments on some of the non-musical joys and hassles.

About the Arts Fuse

The Arts Fuse was established in June, 2007 as a curated, independent online arts magazine dedicated to publishing in-depth criticism, along with high quality previews, interviews, and commentaries. The publication's over 70 freelance critics (many of them with decades of experience) cover dance, film, food, literature, music, television, theater, video games, and visual arts. Support arts coverage that believes that culture matters.

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