Was it kismet or deliberate?
Continue reading “Pre-Existing Conditioning”
Was it kismet or deliberate?
Continue reading “Pre-Existing Conditioning”
Dance First is the latest example of an in-movie title card not matching the advertised title.
Continue reading “Canon?”
Why did the Broadway production of Paula Vogel’s Mother Play cast its three actors according to the age of their characters at the end of the story?
Continue reading “Mother of a Play”
When you walk into Lincoln Center’s Claire Towe Theater for Phillip Howze’s world premiere play Six Characters, an usher will ask whether or not you want to sign up for audience participation.
If you say yes, they’ll hand over a wristband, but don’t hold your breath waiting for a cue; besides playing a role in an early joke involving a fourth-wall breakage, neither the wristbands nor their promised participation are mentioned again.
Which begs the question: why offer the wristbands at all, especially as the audience’s presumably-important first impression of the play?
What’s the significance of letting us believe we can decide to participate, yet never actually giving us an explicit opportunity to do so? How does this “false” expectation relate to the rest of Six Characters?
As a surveyor of unconventional curtain calls — the start and end of a production bear obvious import — I was struck by how Six Characters‘ cast don new costumes for their bows, made to look like the real outfits they could’ve conceivably worn to the theater.
Yet another instance of the production bleeding the barriers between performance and “truth.”
Meta-plays like Six Characters benefit from demonstrating an understanding of their own meta elements…which is why it’s so fitting that one scene takes place around the ultimate representation of the Claire Towe:
Those infernal elevators.
!!! READ NO FURTHER UNTIL YOU SEE THE NEW MOVIE GOOD ONE !!!
Continue reading “There’s A Moment You Know”
Discussions about the differences between film and digital generally boil down to subjective aesthetic preference.
Continue reading “Did You See That?”
What you know about a movie before watching it alters how you watch.
Continue reading “Crumbs”
The Nature of Love is about a gal who ditches her hubby for a paramour.
Continue reading “Framed”
There may be a bait-and-switch afoot in Dìdi.
Continue reading “Not So Fast”
The sufficiently versed in Superbad will detect similarities in Dìdi.
Continue reading “Shade”