entertainment


Luther: The real monk

By Samir Paul | Oct. 8, 2003, midnight | In Movies »

"Luther"


High Noon: western reborn

By Anna Schoenfelder | June 9, 2003, midnight | In Movies »

High Noon, Fred Zinnerman's classic fifties film, recently played at the Silver Spring AFI in all its spare, western glory. Clean direction, clean acting, and clean videography come together in this powerful, moving story of a man who stands alone for his beliefs.


Classic "American Daughter"

By | May 7, 2003, midnight | In Plays »

Wendy Wasserstein's


Gangs of New York: Gangsta's Paradise

By Anna Schoenfelder | Jan. 7, 2003, midnight | In Movies »

Death by butcher knife. Or hatchet. Or club. Or the ever popular meat cleaver. In Gangs of New York, chances are you'll be both shocked at the abundance of murder and amazed at the myriad ways it can be committed. Director Martin Scoresece made this period drama spectacularly accurate in set design, slang, costume, and, of course, in the ever-present violence that permeated the life of the destitute in New York's slums in the civil war era.


A Moon for the Misbegotten

By | May 13, 2002, midnight | In Plays »

"A Moon for the Misbegotten," a tragicomedy about love, lies, and liberation plays now at Arena Stage, through June 16. The play, written my Eugene O'Neill, shows the trials of two characters, Josie Hogan and James Tyrone, Jr. as they free each other from their insecurities and destructive past. O'Neill, who is best known for his disturbing plays about dysfunctional family life, wrote "Moon" with both a sense of humor and a sense of despair, but most of all, an overwhelming surge of redemption. Director Molly Smith does justice to O'Neill's script in the powerful "A Moon for the Misbegotten."

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