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A Bigger Splash has a pleasing richness wherein the sensual elements bind the individual characters to each other, and to nature.
Arts Fuse critics select the best in film, theater, dance, music, visual arts, and author events for the coming week.
Director Paul Daigneault and SpeakEasy Stage have a hit on their hands
High-Rise‘s urban apocalypse is laid on thick. One wishes for a modern existence that is not quite so alienating.
RoosevElvis turns out to a sort of slaphappy homage to two American legends, a genial romp that sticks to stereotypes.
The director approaches his Star Wars interviewees with obvious glee, but he’s also on a quest.
A rare opportunity to see — on the big screen — a film starring Boston-born silent comedian Raymond Griffith, a master of the debonair pratfall.
Although Anger and Forgiveness is a work of systematic philosophy it is also provocatively personal.
A 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.
What is there to say about an album that Rolling Stone ranked #2 in its 2003 list of “The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time”?

Fest Review: IFFBoston Shorts — Part One