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Film & TV

Review: In Michael Jackson Biopic, Michael Gets a Highlight Reel, Audiences Get the Greatest Hits, But No One Gets the Full Truth

by Steve Prokopy
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Music

Review: The Elgin Master Chorale and Director/Conductor Andrew Lewis Produce a Masterful Performance of Stacy Garrop’s Terra Nostra in Elgin

by Louis Harris
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Film & TV

Review: All is Not What it Seems in Normal, the Latest Action Flick from Writer of John Wick

by Guest Author
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Film & TV

Interview: Normal Action Star Bob Odenkirk and Screenwriter Derek Kolstad on Being Underestimated, Staging Great Kills and Chicago Ties

by Steve Prokopy
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Stages

Review: At Chicago Children’s Theatre, Goodnight, Moon Has a Talented Cast in Constant Motion and Merriment

by Nancy S Bishop
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  • Lit , Poetry , Reviews

Book Review: A Kind of Poetry, The Fact of Memory, by Aaron Angello

The Fact of Memory: 114 Ruminations and FabricationsBy Aaron AngelloRose Metal Press In a piece titled “Think,” Aaron Angello tells of two conversations about what makes a poem a poem. In […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • May 3, 2022
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: In Red Orchid’s Tense Last Hermanos, Two Brothers Are Desperate to Escape Across the Border

    Last Hermanos by Exal Iraheta is a play about two brothers, set at some time now or in the recent past or near future, in an abandoned visitor center in a […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • May 2, 2022
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: Porchlight’s Excellent Spring Awakening Rings an Alarm

    Just over 130 years ago, when the German Empire was young and the 19th century was old, the German expressionist playwright Frank Wedekind wrote eine Kindertragödie (the play’s subtitle) called […]

  • Doug Mose
  • May 2, 2022
    • Opera , Stages

    Review: Chicago Opera Theater’s Quamino’s Map Pulls the Curtain Back on Black Life in the Georgian Era

    Quamino’s Map is the 22nd opera by the Belizean-born composer Errollyn Wallen who trained at the University of London and Cambridge. The libretto is by playwright Deborah Brevoort and the […]

  • Kathy D. Hey
  • May 1, 2022
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: Shana Cooper’s Direction Adds Zest to All’s Well That Ends Well at Chicago Shakespeare

    Helen is a bright, attractive young woman, but, sad to say, she’s not royal. So Bertram/Count of Rossillion, the man she loves for reasons not clear, scorns her. The daughter […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • April 30, 2022
    • Comedy , Stages

    Review: Glad to Have the Time Together—Carol Burnett at the Chicago Theatre

    Back in 2020, comedy icon Carol Burnett was scheduled to bring her one-woman show, “An Evening of Reflection and Laughter,” to the equally iconic Chicago Theatre. Then a global pandemic […]

  • Doug Mose
  • April 30, 2022
    • Comics and Graphic Novels , Event , Food , Lit , Nonfiction

    Review: Eating Cheap Without Eating Poorly, The Poorcraft Cookbook

    The Poorcraft Cookbook By Nero Villagallos O’Reilly Iron Circus Comics If there’s one thing old people know it’s that young people are dumb. Selective amnesia makes each generation’s youth-haters forget […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • April 30, 2022
  • Anais in Love
    • Film & TV , Review

    Review: A Breezy French Romantic Comedy, Anaïs in Love Finds Honesty, Authenticity

    Perhaps because I just saw Joachim Trier’s The Worst Person in the World for a second (and just as impressive) time, Anaïs in Love, the feature directorial debut from actor […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • April 29, 2022
  • Hatching
    • Film , Film & TV , Review

    Review: Hatching Is Part Creature-Feature, Part Social Commentary

    Part social commentary, part creature-feature, Finnish thriller Hatching succeeds in large part because it commits so diligently to its conceit, as out there as it is. Tinja (Siiri Solalinna) is the teenage […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • April 29, 2022
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: A Taut Drama Unwinds Identity and Power in Rasheeda Speaking by Shattered Globe Theatre

    Identity politics have become a big part of our everyday life. There is always a tussle over who can be called a real American. If you act a certain way, […]

  • Kathy D. Hey
  • April 29, 2022
  • Jim Broadbent in The Duke
    • Film & TV , Review

    Review: The Duke Chronicles the True, Very British Story of Art Thievery as Civil Protest

    Back in the 1990s, I had a soft spot for British films in which the townspeople all rallied around some cause and simply got things done though sheer will power […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • April 29, 2022
  • Liam Neeson in MEMORY
    • Film & TV , Review

    Review: Liam Neeson’s Latest, Memory, Is Flat and Forgettable

    Well, it’s a new month, so it’s time for a new Liam Neeson movie. And you guessed it: he plays a guy with a certain set of skills that involve […]

  • Steve Prokopy
  • April 28, 2022
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