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Arts & Entertainment

Review: Fantastic Four

My favorite scene in the decidedly mediocre “Fantastic Four” comes late in the game, when Reed Richards, Johnny Storm, Sue Storm and the Thing meet with government and military officials in ...

Review: Shaun the Sheep Movie

Do not expect anyone in “Shaun the Sheep Movie” to utter a complete sentence. To a man (and barnyard animal), every character in this stop-motion charmer from the animators at Aardman Studio...

Review: The Gift

The Golden Age of Stylish Movies About Stalkers commenced with “Fatal Attraction” in 1987 and ran through the mid-1990s, with films such as “Pacific Heights,” “Single White Female,” “Sleepin...

In 'Amy,' the singer Amy Winehouse comes into clear, unsettling focus

It’s all too easy to revert to familiar rhetoric when the subject is Amy Winehouse. Superbly gifted, the singer also publicly grappled with addiction to alcohol and heroin, a battle with dem...

Review: Ricki and the Flash

My running joke about Meryl Streep is she’s so amazing she gets nominated for an Oscar even in years when she wasn’t in any movies. She’s one of the best actors, and quite possibly the most ...

Movies playing in Durango Aug. 7-13

Animas City Theatre (128 E. College Drive, 799-2281, www.animascitytheatre.com) Amy Despite just two albums to her name, Amy Winehouse is one of the biggest...

Steve Jobs to be subject of Santa Fe Opera next year

ALBUQUERQUE – Since his death in 2011, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs has been the subject of documentaries, books, a film and even a graphic novel. Now the technology pioneer will b...

When legend becomes fact, paint the legend

Western pop art icon Billy Schenck unveils new work at Sorrel Sky

Invisible Women? Hollywood’s female superhero problem

LOS ANGELES (AP) – Batman. Spider-Man. Iron Man. Ant-Man. The list of male superheroes starring in their own big-screen escapades is bigger than Tony Stark’s ego, and the billions...

'Wet Hot American Summer' and the rise of '80s and '90s period pieces

Netflix’s “Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp,” released last Friday, is a completely unnecessary but surprisingly charming prequel to the high-concept 2001 parody of classic summer ...

Q: Their job is to stump you — who are they? A: Trivia writers, of course

WASHINGTON — Question No. 1: This seven-word stock line, first introduced in Edward Bulwer-Lytton’s 1830 novel, “Paul Clifford,” is now used stereotypically to introduce stories. ...

No interviewers are asking Tom Cruise about Scientology — and that's not surprising

It’s one of the risks of being a celebrity: Something controversial is going on in your personal life, but it’s right around when your new movie premieres. So you are contractually obligated...
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