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Review: Timeline Opens Its New Home With a Sizzling Staging of An Enemy of the People

by Nancy S Bishop
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Stages

Review: Do You Hear the People Sing? Les Misérables Stuns Chicago Once Again

by Erin Ryan
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Film & TV

Review: Filmmaker Olivier Assayas Takes on Russia in The Wizard of the Kremlin, Starring Jude Law, Paul Dano

by Steve Prokopy
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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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  • Film , Film & TV , Review

Review: Bloody and Action-Packed Prey Finds a Captivating Prequel Story in a Familiar Franchise

The idea behind the Predator prequel is so simple and so perfect, I’m actually genuinely glad that someone took the time to get it right before they tried filming it. […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • August 4, 2022
    • Front page

    Your Chicago Curated Weekend: 8/4 and Beyond

    Summer is still going strong as a new month rolls in! There are tons of really fun events for everyone to do this weekend. It’s feeling a little more normal […]

  • Julian Ramirez
  • August 4, 2022
    • Lit , Nonfiction

    Review: All Those People, All Those Lives, Where Are They Now?, Graceland Cemetery, by Adam Selzer

    Chicago is young. Compared with the large cities of Africa, Asia, and Europe—hell, compared with the Native American metropolis that occupied the Cahokia Mounds—Chicago is a mere toddler of 189 […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • August 3, 2022
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Lena Dunham’s Sharp Stick Pokes at Dysfunction and Complexity But Never Finds It

    Writer/director Lena Dunham burst onto the independent film scene in 2010 with her feature film debut Tiny Furniture, a film that evoked an entire generation’s sense of stasis, an inability to […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • August 3, 2022
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Bullet Train Speeds By With Chaotic Action and Brad Pitt’s Under-Utilized Comedic Wit

    Did you ever have a friend who took one semester of Intro to Psychology and immediately started analyzing themselves and your lives like they wrote the damn textbook? So, that’s […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • August 2, 2022
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Reality and Delusion Are Nearly Indistinguishable in Moody, Angsty Resurrection

    After hoisting herself up as the new queen of angsty acting (with such films as Christine and The Night House) and equally impressive writing/directing (last year’s Sundance offering Passing) Rebecca Hall returns to hold […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • August 1, 2022
  • Fire of Love
    • Film & TV , Interview

    Interview: Documentarian Sara Dosa Explores the Fiery World of Volcanoes, Science and Love in Fire of Love

    In her previous documentary, The Seer and the Unseen, director Sara Dosa adopted an almost magical-realism-like approach to telling the real-life story of an Icelandic woman who spoke on behalf […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • August 1, 2022
    • Music , Reviews

    Review: IDLES Stomps Through Metro

    By guest author Aviv Hart Attempting to categorize British rock band IDLES into a genre is an exercise in semantics. Punk rock? Post-punk? No-wave? Noise rock? Take your pick, it […]

  • V.V. Hart
  • August 1, 2022
    • Fiction , Lit , Reviews

    Review: Wildly Contorted and Reimagined: Don’t Make Me Do Something We’ll Both Regret, by Tim Jones-Yelvington

    In his story collection Don’t Make Me Do Something We’ll Both Regret, Chicagoan Tim Jones-Yelvington zestfully recasts gay men and boys in the central roles of a surprisingly wide array […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • August 1, 2022
    • Events , Lit , Live lit events

    Essay: How Many Books Can $30 Buy at the Newberry Book Fair?

    When I visited the Newberry Library Book Fair on Friday, I knew I had to come up with a strategy.  It’s a locally famous sale, featuring tens of thousands of […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • July 30, 2022
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Paradise Highway Features a Strong Cast But a Loose Grip on the Horrors of Human Trafficking

    In a week filled with oddities at the movie theater, few are stranger in my mind than the feature debut from writer/director Anna Gutto, Paradise Highway, which features two Academy […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • July 29, 2022
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Social Media Fame Backfires in Flawed but Entertaining Not Okay

    Brace yourself. We’re on the verge of being bombarded with higher-profile feature films about the perils of being a 20-something, raised on social media, with a skewed/warped definition of what […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • July 29, 2022
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