Month: May 2016
Arts Fuse critics select the best in film, theater, dance, music, visual arts, and author events for the coming week.
Read MoreDirector Paul Daigneault and SpeakEasy Stage have a hit on their hands
Read MoreHigh-Rise‘s urban apocalypse is laid on thick. One wishes for a modern existence that is not quite so alienating.
Read MoreRoosevElvis turns out to a sort of slaphappy homage to two American legends, a genial romp that sticks to stereotypes.
Read MoreThe director approaches his Star Wars interviewees with obvious glee, but he’s also on a quest.
Read MoreA rare opportunity to see — on the big screen — a film starring Boston-born silent comedian Raymond Griffith, a master of the debonair pratfall.
Read MoreAlthough Anger and Forgiveness is a work of systematic philosophy it is also provocatively personal.
Read MoreA Great Wilderness dramatizes the plight of a believer who is forced to face a powerful truth about himself — that he has probably wasted his life.
Read MoreWhat is there to say about an album that Rolling Stone ranked #2 in its 2003 list of “The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time”?
Read MoreOh, it’s a strange world, ballet — filled with rituals and practices that Mary Jane Doherty captures with sharp-eyed grace.
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