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Film & TV

Review: Independent Documentary The Chaplain & The Doctor Offers a Rare and Bold Glimpse into the Power of Faith and Compassion in Medicine

by Steve Prokopy
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Music

Interview: Chicago’s Stacy Garrop Does What She Was Destined to Do: Compose Excellent Music on Invictus, a New Release on Cedille Records

by Louis Harris
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Music

Preview: Neptune’s Core Makes It Easy to Love “Lemon Car”

by Julian Ramirez
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Stages

Review: City Lit’s New Musical Scaramouche Thrives on Comedy and Theatrical Flair

by Guest Author
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Art & Museums

Preview: Shedd Aquarium Opens New 4D-Experience Theater Where You Can Visit the World of Penguins, Sharks and Oct opuses

by Nancy S Bishop
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  • Film , Film & TV , Review

Review: The Taste of Things Is a Soft, Sumptuous Celebration of French Culinary Culture

The Taste of Things is, by all accounts, a film tailor-made for me—and maybe you, too. A French period romance centered on the country’s rich culinary history starring the great […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • February 18, 2024
    • Film & TV , Review , Television

    Recap: True Detective (S4, Ep2) — Mystery and Character Drama Start to Wear Thin in Second Episode

    True Detective’s conflicts like to play out in the background. The best seasons of True Detective are the ones that give us all the pieces right out the gate and let said pieces melt into its rich settings.

  • Sam Layton
  • February 18, 2024
    • Design , Lit , Nonfiction

    Review: Celebrating Well-Made Books—The Book by Design: The Remarkable Story of the World’s Greatest Invention, edited by P.J.M. Marks and Stephen Parkin

    For more than 18 centuries, paper was made with rags—old clothes, sails, and ropes—the same way it had first been fashioned in China. But, by the 19th century, the process of […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • February 17, 2024
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: Court Theatre’s Antigone Asks the Old Questions for New Times

    Every time an old play is revived, it inhabits two dimensions—the time of its writing and the time of its revival. You can’t exactly call a restaging of a 2,400+ […]

  • Doug Mose
  • February 17, 2024
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: A Slight but Entertaining Thriller, Monolith Follows a Disgraced Journalist on a New, Mysterious Investigation

    One-character thrillers are tough to pull off under the best of circumstances, but first-time feature director Matt Vesely and screenwriter Lucy Campbell actually make Monolith feel less like a one-woman […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • February 16, 2024
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Father and Daughter Journey Toward Reconciliation (and Rehab) in Bleeding Love

    Family drama is rarely depicted on screen with quite such bite as Bleeding Love, which casts real-life father and daughter Ewan McGregor and Clara McGregor playing an estranged father and […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • February 16, 2024
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Bob Marley: One Love Has a Narrow Focus on the Complicated, Robust Life of the Musician and Activist

    Rather than attempt to tell the complete life story of iconic singer/songwriter Bob Marley, the latest from director Reinaldo Marcus Green (Monsters and Men, King Richard, Joe Bell), Bob Marley: […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • February 16, 2024
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Dakota Johnson Enters the Marvel Universe with Madame Web, a Frustrating Addition to the Spider-Man Franchise

    Unlike some (many?), I haven’t grown weary of superhero films as a genre. What I have grown exhausted by are specifically Sony-made Spider-Verse movies that try to walk the line […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • February 16, 2024
    • Broadway , Stages , Theater

    Review: Midnight’s Broken Toll …. Girl from the North Country

    Girl from the North Country, a musical adaptation of Bob Dylan’s songs by the Irish playwright Conor McPherson, has already appeared in London’s West End, Off-Broadway at the Public Theater, […]

  • June Sawyers
  • February 16, 2024
    • Dance , Stages

    Review: In Studies in Blue, Joffrey Ballet Performs a Visual and Sensual Feast of Movement

    Blue is a metaphor for emotions, music, sensuality, and an emotionally wrought period in the life of Pablo Picasso. Like Joni Mitchell’s “Blue,” the Joffrey Ballet’s Studies in Blue held […]

  • Kathy D. Hey
  • February 16, 2024
    • Music , Reviews

    Review: Deap Vally Bid Farewell During a Killer Show at Thalia Hall

    Everything must come to an end and this past weekend, Deap Vally stopped by Thalia Hall on their grand farewell tour. The duo of guitarist Lindsey Troy and drummer Julie […]

  • Julian Ramirez
  • February 16, 2024
    • Art & Museums , Beyond , Design , Event

    Kinda Blue: The Chicago Auto Show Returns To McCormick Place Sans Stellantis

    Every year in early February we gear up to return to McCormick Place for the first big show of the year, the Chicago Auto Show. Put on by CATA, the […]

  • Marielle Bokor
  • February 15, 2024
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