Posts

Fuse Coming Attractions: What Will Light Your Fire This Week

November 2, 2014
Posted in , , ,

Arts Fuse critics select the best in music, film, visual arts, theater, author readings, and dance that’s coming up in the next week.

Theater Interview: Boston Public Works – Seven Playwrights Making a New Road Map for New Plays

November 2, 2014
Posted in , ,

Self-production, I think, is for artists who also are entrepreneurs who have a burning desire to get their voice heard.

Visual Arts: Simon Fujiwara at Harvard’s Carpenter Center — A Canny, Wildly Funny Lens on Modern Ideas

November 2, 2014
Posted in , ,

Simon Fujiwara epitomizes the new model of a successful avant-garde artist in the world today.

Film Review: “Hoax_Canular” — Teen Prophets Turn to YouTube to Warn of Doomsday

November 1, 2014
Posted in , ,

Hoax_Canular contains many troubling glimpses into private worlds, intimate visions of radical insecurity that are baffling, frightening, and flat-out bizarre.

Arts Remembrance: Galway Kinnell — “The Cadence of Vanishing”

November 1, 2014
Posted in ,

Galway Kinnell served as the Poet Laureate of Vermont and penned a number of poems, which often took the form of pastoral ramblings, that celebrated his appreciation of the rural life.

Film Review: “Nightcrawler” — A Dark Parody of Getting Ahead

October 31, 2014
Posted in , ,

Nightcrawler is a vicious satire of the high stakes required to survive in an American free enterprise system where losers are kicked to the curb and winners take all.

Fuse Film Review: “Listen Up Philip” — Portrait of the Artist as Sheer Ego

October 31, 2014
Posted in , ,

Despite Philip’s self-absorbed claptrap, young, successful women seem to be drawn to him. Go figure.

Theater Review: “Hedda Gabler” at the Gamm Theatre — Not Subtle, But Lively

October 31, 2014
Posted in , ,

Despite some awkward staging decisions and the script tampering, there is plenty of lively drive in this production of Hedda Gabler.

Theater Review: “Bad Jews” — Lots of Sound and Fury

October 31, 2014
Posted in , ,

The play’s lead characters – representing polar opposites, cultural versus religious Judaism – ultimately exhaust one another, and us.

Book Review: “The Zone of Interest” — Not Quite Interesting Enough

October 30, 2014
Posted in , ,

Martin Amis’s fiction, bleak though it often is, paradoxically remains compelling and pleasurable to read because of how well he writes about dreadful things.

Recent Posts

Popular Posts

Categories

Archives