Arts and Entertainment
"The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" and "The Girl Who Played with Fire" Print E-mail
Arts and Entertainment - Movies
Written by Albert Moreno   
Sunday, 18 July 2010 18:46

This past week, I have seen two Swedish films which have become blockbusters in their own country. They are the first two installments of what has come to be known as the Millennium trilogy - The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, and The Girl who Played with Fire. The third film in the trilogy, The Girl who Kicked the Hornets' Nest, has been released in Sweden, but has not made it to the U.S. yet. I will be reviewing the first two films here because it is almost impossible to write about each one separately.

 
The Magic Flute Print E-mail
Arts and Entertainment - Movies
Written by Albert Moreno   
Sunday, 27 June 2010 19:00

My movie reviews for this magazine have, so far, been exactly that - reviews, not editorials. But over the past two weeks, I have encountered a situation that infuriated me to the point that I decided that I would try to cover something that is terribly wrong with film distribution in the United States. And yes, it concerns a film that many will find hopelessly "highbrow", though its director's intention was to make what many consider to be a limited art form accessible to a general audience.

Back in 2006, actor-writer-director and general wunderkind Kenneth Branagh, who has been responsible over the last twenty years for excellent new film versions of Shakespeare plays, made a new film version of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's German-language opera The Magic Flute. Yes, I said opera. Branagh filmed it with all of its music intact,  and he cast it with full-fledged opera singers, not pop singers disastrously trying to sing classical music. And he made the film in English, resetting the mythical fantasy to take place during World War I.

 
Avatar Print E-mail
Arts and Entertainment - Movies
Written by Albert Moreno   
Tuesday, 02 February 2010 19:04

With Avatar, which I finally saw yesterday, director James Cameron has succeeded in creating a  science fiction world so completely believable that there is not a single moment when we don't believe that its blue-skinned humanoid tribe, the Na'vi, do not really exist in some corner of the universe that we have not explored.  The word "breakthrough" has been used in describing it, and for once it is not hype or exaggeration. The fact that the film has been made in 3-D adds immeasurably to the illusion of reality. (Yes, you do have to wear special glasses, but once the film starts you will hardly care.)

 
Locke On LOST Island Print E-mail
Arts and Entertainment - Personalities
Written by Santina Muha   
Monday, 18 May 2009 15:32
Are we supposed to believe someone would rather spend his life on a deserted island with monsters & polar bears & black smoke than wheeling in America with family & friends & technology & food? 

If you are watching Lost then you know there is no shortage of mysteries. But as someone living with a spinal cord injury, I would have to say one of the biggest mysteries to me is why John Locke made the decision to remain on the island in the first place. I know that as the seasons went on we learned that he feels it is his mission in life to be the leader of this island, but as far as viewers and Locke himself were concerned in the first few seasons, the only advantage of that island was that he was miraculously cured of any injury to his spine.

 
"Together Through Life," Bob Dylan Print E-mail
Arts and Entertainment - Music
Written by Joy Taylor   
Sunday, 03 May 2009 16:50
"Together Through Life"
Bob Dylan
Columbia Records

Bob Dylan has said that his newest album, "Together Through Life," was inspired by the Chess and the  Sun labels recordings of the Fifties.  The ghosts of Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters make their presence known on most of the tracks, with Parisian Edith Piaf and Texan Doug Sahm dropping in for a twirl or two around the dance floor. Leave it to Dylan to pull up some really old roots that .
 
Finding A Deeper Meaning In The Music Print E-mail
Arts and Entertainment - Music
Written by Clare Willson   
Monday, 09 March 2009 19:12

Bill Friskics-Warren has the perfect job:  He spends his time listening to all genres of music and interviewing artists for a living. A writer and music critic, he has written music reviews in such noteworthy publications as The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Village Voice, to name but a few. Last week, he was interviewed on National Public Radio to discuss the theme of his latest book. Most recently, he was Music Editor for The Nashville Scene; he and his wife reside in the music mecca of Nashville. Recently, he made the transition to freelance writer.

 
"The Reader" Print E-mail
Arts and Entertainment - Movies
Written by Albert Moreno   
Friday, 06 March 2009 15:49

I finally got a chance to see  The Reader this week, and after seeing it, and asking myself the question “Does the oft-nominated Kate Winslet really deserve her Best Actress Oscar for this performance more than Meryl Streep does for the film Doubt?”, I would have to grudgingly say “Yes”, despite the fact that I think both actresses are terrific. Ms. Winslet successfully brings to life an immensely complicated, somewhat unlikable character and even generates a certain amount of pity for her. The film itself raises some deeply troubling questions and paradoxes about guilt and innocence, and has even raised howls of protest from some critics.

 
Multifaceted and Talented, Miss Money Print E-mail
Arts and Entertainment - Personalities
Written by Joy Taylor   
Tuesday, 03 March 2009 10:23

Her incredibly beautiful voice, intensely deep and powerful, has been compared to Lauryn Hill's and Fantasia Barrino's.  Throughout Miss Money's career, her fluid originals, gorgeous gospel moments, as well as her heartfelt rhythm and blues arrangements have expressed passion in a different manner. Maturely expressing love and relationships in her music, she prefers to write her compositions in order to be enjoyed by all.

 
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