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Stages

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

by Nancy S Bishop
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Music

Review: Ivy’s Traces of You Tour Comes to Park West

by Anthony Cusumano
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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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  • Game , Games & Tech , Review

Review: New Netcode The King of Fighters ’98 Ultimate Final Match Edition Means One of the Best Fighting Games Just Got Better

One of the best fighting games of all time has gotten a Christmas upgrade from SNK and Code Mystics: The King of Fighters ’98 Ultimate Final Match Edition. If you […]

  • Antal Bokor
  • December 28, 2021
  • Tragedy of Macbeth
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Dark, Hazy and Filled with Drama, The Tragedy of Macbeth Is a Unique, Impressive Take on Classic Material

    Like Orson Welles did nearly 75 years earlier, director Joel Coen (working without brother Ethan) has taken Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Macbeth, stripped it down to essentials—minimalist set design, shot […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • December 26, 2021
    • Game , Games & Tech , Review

    Review: Charming The Gunk Could Have Been Better

      A few years ago, I was afraid that single player games were dying—especially games with more AA or AAA type gameplay and graphics. While those things aren’t necessary, it’s […]

  • Antal Bokor
  • December 24, 2021
  • Licorice Pizza
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Often Delightful, Sometimes Heartbreaking, Paul Thomas Anderson’s Licorice Pizza Is One of the Year’s Best

    I was too young in the early to mid-1970s to have any real appreciation or nostalgia for the era today; and I grew up on the east coast, nowhere near […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • December 23, 2021
    • Game , Games & Tech , Review

    Review: Wolfstride Is a Mix of Anime and Turn-Based Mecha Action

    I don’t know what I was expecting going into Wolfstride, but it isn’t what I got. I think I was sold on the prospect of turn-based mech combat, but I […]

  • Antal Bokor
  • December 22, 2021
    • Classical , Reviews

    Review: Music of the Baroque’s Immersive Holiday Brass and Choral Concert

    If you have never attended one of Music of the Baroque’s Holiday Brass and Choral Concerts, you owe it to yourself to mark your December 2022 calendar to ensure that you […]

  • Bob Benenson
  • December 22, 2021
  • The King's Man
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Jumping Back in Time a Century, a Bawdy, Unsophisticated The King’s Man Sets Up the Future of the Franchise

    To be clear, this 100-years-earlier prequel to director Matthew Vaughn’s original 2014 Kingsman: The Secret Service (as well as its abysmal 2017 sequel Kingsman: The Golden Circle) does not portray […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • December 21, 2021
  • Matrix Resurrections
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: In Resurrecting The Matrix, the Fourth Installment Feels Stale and Sadly Familiar

    It’s astonishing that there are those criticizing how Spider-Man: No Way Home bends multiple Spider-Man universes in on themselves, but they don’t seem to have any issues with the latest […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • December 21, 2021
    • Game , Games & Tech , Review

    Review: Flynn Son of Crimson Is a Competent Action Platformer

    While Flynn: Son of Crimson immediately invokes pirate imagery in my head, it turns out it’s an ambitious action platformer that started its life as a Kickstarter project back in […]

  • Antal Bokor
  • December 21, 2021
    • Game , Games & Tech , Review

    Review: Dungeon Munchies Is a Bland Morsel

    I’m beginning to hate when games are surprised announced. Sure, it’s exciting for most people, and it creates an amount of buzz around a game that might not have that […]

  • Antal Bokor
  • December 21, 2021
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: A Hero’s Journey for Alaudin Ullah in Dishwasher Dreams at Writers Theatre

    Every first-generation person has a story of integrating the ways of the old country, or of their ancestral region like the American South. It is how identities are built and […]

  • Kathy D. Hey
  • December 21, 2021
  • The Lost Daughter
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Maggie Gyllenhaal Adapts The Lost Daughter into a Compelling, Devastating Exploration of Motherhood

    Italian author Elena Ferrante (a pseudonym, no one actually knows who Ferrante is) has written 11 novels; her four-book Neopolitan series has sold millions of copies, been translated into dozens […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • December 19, 2021
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