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Arts Fuse critics select the best in film, theater, dance, music, visual arts, and author events for the coming week.
Time after time, when the cheap and easy outcome is there for the plucking, Me Before You ditches the teary payoffs.
The Fallen Idol is one of the best achieved examples in cinema of seeing the world through the eyes of a child.
Rembrandt’s casual scratches snap into recognizability with the surprise of stage magic. But there’s no trick, it’s the genuine miracle of talent.
The Arts Fuse is developing a new initiative: the Arts Critic Mentorship Program and celebrates turning nine!
It is not surprising that Wendy Warren strains to find words to “comprehend the rank tragedy that resulted from enslavement.”
The author makes fully human an illness marked by absence and estrangement from humanity.
Josa-Jones is a unique mover, totally committed to her movement, and totally moving in every body part.
In no way does Sweetbitter succeed in doing what you are led to expect of it: to frame the post-9/11 zeitgeist.

Fest Review: IFFBoston Shorts — Part One