Arts
-
Review: Welcome to ‘Illinoise,’ Land of Love, Grief and Zombies
Sufjan Stevens’s 2005 concept album has become an unlikely and unforgettable dance-musical hybrid, directed and choreographed by Justin Peck.
-
‘Damsel’ Review: Yet Another Strong Female Lead
Millie Bobby Brown is a daring princess in a fairy tale that unspools its surprises far too soon.
-
Review: In ‘Doubt,’ What He Knows, She Knows, God Knows
Liev Schreiber and Amy Ryan star in a revival of John Patrick Shanley’s moral head spinner about pride, the priesthood…
-
The Film Christopher Nolan Doesn’t Want You to Watch
Nolan’s short film “Larceny” has not been shown publicly since a 1996 film festival. With the director in position to…
-
‘High & Low — John Galliano’ Review: Designing a Comeback
This documentary tracks what happened after the British designer was caught on camera voicing racist and antisemitic hate speech.
-
‘Love Lies Bleeding’ Review: Kristen Stewart, Crazy (and Scary) in Love
In this neo-noir, the ever reliable, always watchable actress plays a small-town loner who’s struck by the unexpected arrival of…
-
Oscars 2024 Predictions: Who Will Win Best Picture, Actor and Actress?
“Oppenheimer” is the best picture favorite, but the best actress race is full of suspense. Our expert predicts which films…
-
Bond of Brothers: The Black Crowes Are Back, and Bygones Are Bygones
If there’s one thing the fractious Black Crowes co-founders agree on, it’s that they’ve never fit in. When the Atlanta-based…
-
Nona Faustine Never Leaves the Frame
In striking self-portraits at the Brooklyn Museum, the artist revisits locations with histories of enslavement and reimagines the body as…
-
Playing a British Rogue, With Added Firepower
Daniel Ings has built a career playing charming, posh men. His latest role is a chaotic aristocrat in Guy Ritchie’s…