Month: October 2015
Filmmaker Alexandra Anthony’s ambitious debut documentary was, in essence, fifty years in the making.
Read MoreHarold Pinter’s language can be enigmatic and deliberately bizarre, but it suggests arcs of passion and desire.
Read MoreClive James gets the most out of whatever’s on the page and isn’t shy about making larger connections.
Read MoreMichael Lewin’s new album must surely rank among the most poetic and sensitive Debussy recordings of recent memory.
Read MoreDivided into three acts and an epilogue, the film attempts to generate Shakespearean resonances, but the presentation is more mundane than tragic.
Read MorePhilippe Petit’s feat has inspired an amazing documentary, and now an amazing feature film.
Read MoreAn event that makes you feel good about the Boston scene—in part because it’s about the rock community getting together to help friends with multiple sclerosis.
Read Moretrumpeter–composer Mark Harvey’s imaginative conducting made the pieces work together in fascinating ways.
Read MoreDrunk Stoned Brilliant Dead is mostly a straight-ahead telling of the vivid life of the National Lampoon.
Read MoreArts Fuse critics select the best in film, theater, music, visual arts, and author events for the coming week.
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Design Review: A Singular Art Nouveau Shop Front in Harvard Square