Posts
Slow West bursts with visual interest, but doesn’t seem to be able to settle on what story it wants to tell.
This is a powerful, intensely felt short novel about the lives of ordinary people by a very young Irish writer.
Had Daniil Kharms’ texts been available at the high tide of the Theater of the Absurd, his plays would be performed alongside those of Samuel Beckett and Eugene Ionesco.
Arts Fuse critics select the best in film, theater, music, dance, visual arts, and author events for the coming week.
Back To Fort Scott, a compact, affecting exhibition of meticulously printed black and white photographs, is like a grainy, retro speed bump between the museum’s adjacent galleries.
Jazz Week 2015 shines a spotlight on the jazz scene—historic and current—in Boston’s core African American community of Roxbury (and adjoining Mattapan and Dorchester).
The comedy-tinged-with-drama touches on themes tackled by a bunch of recent indie movies that center on characters in their thirties and forties who feel like imposters in the world of adults.
H. relies on clever editing manipulations and pithy reaction shots rather than on flashy special effects.
Music Commentary Series: Jazz and the Piano Concerto — Balancing Acts at Symphony Hall
What makes pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet an ideal interpreter of Ravel’s Concerto in G is his understanding of and appreciation for jazz.
Read More about Music Commentary Series: Jazz and the Piano Concerto — Balancing Acts at Symphony Hall