Arts
Making Great TV is A Walk in the Park for...
The third season of Josh Gad’s Central Park on AppleTV+ brings plenty of laughs and show-stopping musical numbers while also tackling serious subjects. … read more
Film Review: Gigi & Nate
The performances in Gigi & Nate range from broadly stereotypical to awkwardly wooden, and the only character with any kind of nuance is the monkey. … read more
Film Review: Burial
While not a bad film and worthy of a rental, Burial is simply not the movie that it had the potential to be. … read more
Film Review: Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul
Honk For Jesus. Save Your Soul is a decent film with enough energetic charm and skill behind it to highlight the promising talents of its cast. … read more
Television: August 1991
The special effects are occasionally low budget and cheesy, but it doesn’t matter. … read more
Film Review: Breaking
Breaking falls short of a modern classic, yet it remains an involving film that is easily my pick for the best new film opening this weekend. … read more
Film Review: Bodies Bodies Bodies
Bodies Bodies Bodies, directed by Halina Reijn, doesn’t take itself too seriously, using an old structure—the “whodunnit”—and giving it a whole new meaning. … read more
Film Review: Three Thousand Years of Longing
In Three Thousand Years of Longing, George Miller may have earned the clout to make something utterly flat, but audiences have the right to a better time. … read more
Michelle Danner Talks The Runner
If there’s anyone who knows a thing or two about the correlation between art and education, it’s Michelle Danner, the director of the new thriller, The Runner. … read more
James Morosini On The Emotional Truth of I Love My...
I Love My Dad is an equal mix of outrageously hilarious and deeply touching, representing a breakthrough for director James Morosini as an ambitious artist. … read more