Killers of the Flower Moon (c) Apple TV+
"New York is my Personal Property and I'm gonna split it with you." I review mostly movies and New York theater shows. I am also an awards prognosticator. And a playwright.
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Monday, February 26, 2024
Thursday, February 22, 2024
Theater Review: At New World Stages, Two Crowd-Pleasing Shows Take a Walk Down Memory Lane With Music (“A Sign of the Times”) and TV Shows (“The Life and Slimes of Marc Summers”) With Insightful and Darker Detours
A Sign of the Times (c) Jeremy Daniel
Theater: A Sign of the Times
York Theatre at New World Stages
It’s 1965 and jukeboxes are not only filled with catchy, frivolous tunes, but also a couple of social justice songs peppered in for the more politically minded young people of the day. This odd juxtaposition is the point of the new musical, A Sign of the Times, which pairs the more recognizable (from its first few notes) hits with more obscure, serious songs to keep us on our toes. The story by Lindsey Hope Pearlman (from a concept by Richard Robin) revolves around Cindy (Chilina Kennedy), who on the eve of 1965, feels the pull of New York City from the televised Times Square celebration all the way in Centerville, Ohio, strong enough to postpone a marriage proposal from her childhood beau, Matt (Justin Matthew Sargent), to pursue her dream of becoming a photographer. She takes the bus to the Big Apple and becomes roomies with aspiring singer Tanya (Ain’t No Mo’s Tony-nominee Crystal Lucas-Perry) and finds a job in the steno-pool at an advertising company run by Brian Paulson (Ryan Silverman), who takes a liking to Cindy. Meanwhile Tanya starts flirting with Cody Jackson (Akron Lanier Watson), a young freedom rider for Black rights. But Pearlman’s overstuffed book doesn’t stop there; she throws in many issues of the day, including women’s rights, anti-war protests and even a sprinkling of gay rights, all while incorporating songs like Petula Clark’s “Downtown” and Nancy Sinatra’s “These Boots Were Made for Walking” with Elvis’ “If I Can Dream” and Janis Ian’s “Society’s Child.” Some songs are comfortably and thematically on point like “You Don’t Own Me,” while others, as in many a jukebox musical, feel rather awkwardly gerrymandered to fit.
Tuesday, February 13, 2024
The Interested Bystander’s Oscar Predictions: February 2024
The Holdovers (c) Focus Features
We are in the final stretch for Oscars. This is the time for you lovely lot to catch up on all the nominees and make up your minds on which film is most deserving and which one is your favorite (most of the time, the two don’t match up). We did find out who the DGA chose this weekend (congrats to Christopher Nolan), but we also have the Independent Spirit Awards, PGA Awards and the SAG Awards coming up to keep us occupied until the Oscars on Sunday, March 10. Here are my predictions of who will the Oscars as of today, in order of likelihood to win. My next Oscars predictions at the beginning of March will even more specific with percentages, like last year (you can see how well I did here).
Enjoy.
Tuesday, February 6, 2024
"All of Us Strangers," Lily Gladstone & Jodie Foster receive 2023 LGBTQ Critics Dorian Award Nominations
All of Us Strangers (c) Searchlight Pictures
GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics, consisting of over 500 entertainment critics, journalists and media icons, today announced the group’s democratically chosen nominees for its 15th Dorian Film Awards. All of Us Strangers, writer-director Andrew Haigh’s eerie, devastating—yet ultimately spirited—probing of connection and self-love, led the journalists’ picks for the best of 2023 movies, receiving 9 nods including Film of the Year. Joining Strangers in the top race: Director Greta Gerwig’s rainbow-hued feminist fable Barbie (7 nominations), Todd Haynes’ May December (6), Past Lives (5), and Poor Things (4).
Friday, February 2, 2024
Film Reviews: Daisy Ridley is Quaint as She “Think(s) About Dying,” Genders Are Explored in Provocative “Skin Deep” and the Extra L in Matthew Vaughn’s “Argylle” Is for Loopy
Sometimes I Think About Dying (c) Oscilloscope