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It is as poignant as it is ominous that Jeff Weaver will be among the last painters to document the last gasps of Gloucester as locals have known and loved it
Read MoreMaybe The Zombies are not quite as elaborately visionary as they used to be, but after all this time that is no great sin. And Colin Blunstone and Ron Argent’s breathy but soulful voices have held up magnificently.
Read MoreThe point of the revelatory exercises in Second Star is to mentally invigorate, to sharpen how we look at the things in plain sight that we take for granted.
Read MoreNetflix’s dumb series Sanctuary serves up a cartoon view of sumo wrestling.
Read MoreKerry Howley’s expose is a vibrant report on the chaotic and often disquieting world of surveillance and national security.
Read MoreChildren’s picture books about dogs and cats are plentiful, but a few new entries in the genre stand out.
Read MoreThis not-quite-full retrospective contains three masterpieces of Iranian cinema: Close-Up, Taste of Cherry and The Wind Will Carry Us.
Read MoreChasing Rembrandt is a small show, probably quickly assembled to complement the TheaterWorks production. For curious viewers, though, it raises a number of provocative questions.
Read MoreThe saxman and his usual band (including vocalist Patrice Quinn instead of the billed Ami Taf Ra) easily adapted to the 200-seat venue, barely modulating their visceral delivery while also highlighting their softer dynamics and a personal rapport.
Read MoreAll of the characters in Back to the Dirt are, in a sense, survivalists, people clinging onto what’s long gone, stockpiling karma for an apocalypse that is already upon them.
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Book Review: “Unfinished” Argues for AI as an Artistic Partner — But at What Cost?