Tag: september 2022
-
‘Across the 110th Street’ is a Bleak, Ambivalent Police Procedural
The film is a high-water mark for the 1970s procedural.
-

Watching ‘The Princess Bride,’ on Its 35th Anniversary, with Cary Elwes
The English actor made an appearance at a special screening of the movie at Tacoma’s Pantages Theater.
-

Don’t Worry About Seeing ‘Don’t Worry Darling,’ Darling
Olivia Wilde’s much-gossiped-about sophomore feature is nowhere near a disaster, but it’s not good, either.
-

‘Blue Collar”s Frankness Takes You Aback
‘Blue Collar’ doesn’t end on a hopeful note akin to the more widely seen, and still-good, mainstream unionization drama ‘Norma Rae,’ which came out the next year. It wades in, and stays put in, the hell of working a hard, badly paying job
-

She’s Done It Again: On Grace Jones at the Moore Theatre
The legendary septuagenarian put on a characteristically singular show in Seattle on Wednesday.
-

An Unforgettable Night with Kehlani
The pop star powered through what felt like a cursed stop on their Blue Water Road Trip tour Sunday evening at Seattle’s WAMU Theater.
-

‘The Woman King’ is a Towering, Complicated Action Epic
Plus: ‘Pearl,’ a prequel to the great neo-slasher film ‘X,’ disappoints.
-

‘Norma Rae’ Still Invigorates
‘Norma Rae’ isn’t electrifying by force. Instead, just by carefully dramatizing the process of unionization, it captures the simple thrills of workplace organization — the pleasurable charge felt when you realize it’s possible to have a say in an arena where you never thought you’d have one.
-

‘Chameleon Street’ Still Feels a Step Ahead
Faking it till you make it is rarely as literal as it is in ‘Chameleon Street.’
-

‘Strike!’ Keeps Things on the Surface
‘Strike!’ is slight but pleasant, redeemed by a charming cast and a writer-director, Sarah Kernochan, whose fondness for her characters and subject matter is infectiously clear.

