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  •  
    [image]

    Matisse in His Own Image

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    Bringing the Big Top to Broadway

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    [image]

    ‘Tug of War: Foreign Fire’ Review

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    An Exhibition Where the Organic Meets the Dynamic

    Burle Marx should be remembered for more than his landscapes.

  • [image]

    A Supergroup That Held Together

    When country legends joined forces, their careers saw the benefit.

  • [image]

    From Many Styles, One Sound

    Across its body of work, the Boston-based sextet Bent Knee taps into cabaret, ’70s piano-based folk, chamber pop, industrial rock, metal, prog rock and more.

  • [image]

    Joel Shapiro Makes Forms Fly

    A career overview of a master of Minimalist abstraction, with a focus on a new, site-specific work.

  • [image]

    Noir From a Poet Of Love and Violence

    Nicholas Ray’s ‘In a Lonely Place’ distills the essence of emotion in his story of murder, romance and creeping suspicions.

  • [image]

    A Cello Brigadoon in Los Angeles

    The Piatigorsky International Cello Festival collected a healthy clutch of great cellists and their acolytes, giving equal time to master classes and intimate recitals.

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    A City Under Glass

    The Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II is a twinkling, operatic stage for commerce.

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    ‘The Judas Kiss’ Review: A Peacock Meets His Doom

    David Hare’s play about Oscar Wilde doesn’t shy away from pointing out the writer’s own culpability in his fall from grace.

  • [image]

    ‘Weiner’ Review: Wild, Weird, Politically Incorrect and True

    A documentary offers an intimate look at the colorfully checkered career of one of New York’s most notorious pols.

  • [image]

    ‘The Nice Guys’ Review: Mystery and Mismatched Sleuths

    Ryan Gosling and Russell Crowe team up to investigate a disappearance in floozy-filled 1970s Los Angeles.

  • [image]

    ‘Maggie’s Plan’ Review: Finding a Father

    A New York woman develops a strategy to get pregnant in Rebecca Miller’s witty tale of modern life.

  • [image]

    ‘All the Way’ Review: The Pressures of the Highest Office

    The story of LBJ’s presidency reveals a deeply idealistic man and the spirited wife who loved him.

  • [image]

    ‘Julian Fellowes Presents Doctor Thorne’ Review

    Will this adaptation of the Anthony Trollope novel fill the ‘Downton Abbey’-shaped hole in fans’ hearts?

  • [image]

    Stirrings on the Fenway

    A chance to see about 25 of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum’s best works like never before.

  • [image]

    The Best Kind of Political Artist

    David Hare, writer of ‘The Judas Kiss,’ creates villains who are fully rounded creatures of flesh and blood.

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    ‘Lady Dynamite’ Review: The Entertainment Superhighway

    Maria Bamford’s new Netflix comedy embodies everything that’s best about television’s shift toward the Web.

  • [image]

    A Leviathan Talent at the Met

    Titanic power and imminent danger provide a compelling backdrop to scenes of struggle and survival.

  • [image]

    Cyndi Lauper Takes a Country Road

    Cyndi Lauper’s new album follows a sonic path that’s always beckoned.

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    Rediscovering a Maestro

    Celebrating the violinist Yehudi Menuhin during his centenary year.

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    ‘Genius by Stephen Hawking’ Review: Science Meets Reality TV

    Ordinary people try to reason like history’s great scientific thinkers and arrive at answers to life’s big questions.

  • [image]

    Turning Science Into Art

    How the scientist Alexander von Humboldt inspired Frederic Edwin Church’s artistic brilliance.

  • [image]

    An Oddball Modernist at 150

    Erik Satie’s legacy includes instantly recognizable music, complex works and odd philosophical pronouncements that still inspire artists.

  • [image]

    From Page to Stage at the Opera

    Operas based on famous books or movies have to offer a new insight into a familiar story.

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    Moving Beyond Folk

    Marissa Nadler pushes her sound beyond its folk roots on her new album.

  • Art’s Lessons, Filtered Through Verse

    Paintings from a Brussels museum of fine art are the focus of W.H. Auden’s musings on suffering.

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    ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ Review: Tennessee Williams, by the Book

    This staging, featuring a fine cast and running in repertory with ‘Death of a Salesman,’ stays loyal to the earliest and best-known productions of the work.

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    ‘Dheepan’ Review: New World Disorder

    Three Sri Lankan refugees passing as a family try to restart their lives outside of Paris.

    • Film Clip: ‘Dheepan’
    • More Reviews: ‘Money Monster’ | ‘Eva Hesse’
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    ‘Money Monster’ Review: Stock Tips in the Crosshairs

    A package-delivery driver holds a financial guru hostage on live television in this film starring George Clooney and Julia Roberts.

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    ‘Eva Hesse’ Review: The Persistence of the Ephemeral

    A documentary appraisal of one of the most influential artists and sculptors of the 20th century.

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    ‘The Secret History of ISIS’ Review: Sowing the Terrorist Wind

    A PBS documentary about the rise of Islamic State puts two administrations in the dock for letting it happen.

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    ‘19-2’ Review: How Well Canada Does Cop Drama

    A police procedural set in Montreal makes the genre seem new again.

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    Is Anti-Semitism a Thing of the Past?

    Prejudice different from racism, with which it is confused.

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    The Fabric of the Future

    Marrying the abilities of the machine with the quality of hand-made garments at the Met.

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    The Whitney’s Portrait Show Is More Famine Than Feast

    A sampling from the museum’s collection is a poor entree into the art of portraiture.

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    Advancing the Frontier in Documentaries

    Robert Drew emphasized the visual over the verbal in television journalism.

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    Attention for New and Old Alike at NYCB

    New York City Ballet’s spring season offers the opportunity to take in new works and see dancers make their marks on familiar fare.

  • [image]

    A Jazz Record for Jazz Fans

    Trumpeter and composer Theo Croker comes from the heart of the jazz tradition.

  • [image]

    An Empire of Treasures

    A show reveals the opulent majesty of the centuries that followed Alexander the Great’s reign.

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    ‘A Moon Shaped Pool’ by Radiohead Review

    On its ninth studio album, Radiohead makes the experimental accessible while challenging the definition of popular music in 2016.

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    Shakespeare as All-Too-Modern Nightmare

    A production of ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ that’s fixated on playing to today’s tastes.

  • [image]

    ‘Nascar: The Rise of American Speed’ Review

    In this history of the racing association, a tale of American entrepreneurship has to compete with star worship and stories told over and over again.

  • [image]

    Edvard Munch: Father of Expressionism

    Viewers who flock to this exhibition for ‘The Scream’ might be surprised by Munch’s younger followers.

  • [image]

    Anxiety-Free Modernism

    Alarm Will Sound‘s ‘Modernists’ is a showcase for the quirky programming sensibility of this new-music chamber orchestra.

  • [image]

    An Artist Veiled in Shadow

    After painting images of human folly, La Tour turned to the deeply spiritual.

  • [image]

    Funky Fashion Hybrids, Free From Precedent

    Drawing on influences from the absurdity of American childhood to the energy of Eastern design, he created a sartorial language of his own.

  • [image]

    Sound From Louisiana and Beyond

    Rock ’n’ roll with a dose of punk and a little bit of funk.

  • [image]

    ‘Continuum’ Reivew: An Album That’s Expansive and Expandable

    The mesmerizing music of Nik Bärtsch and his Mobile ensemble is hard to label.

  • [image]

    ‘Maron’ Review: Comedy as Catharsis

    Podcastless and adrift, Marc Maron is in a dark place in season four of the IFC show.

  • [image]

    At SFMOMA, Stairways to Creative Heaven

    The expansion of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art makes a clear statement yet about the new era of museums.

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    In San Francisco, Modern and Contemporary Art Get Room to Breathe

    Big-name artists populate a gigantic museum.

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    ‘The Ship’ by Brian Eno Review: On the Wages of Man’s Hubris

    This new album is unlike anything else in Brian Eno’s 21st-century catalog.

  • [image]

    Notable & Quotable: Rebuilding Palmyra

    ‘The Isis attack on Palmyra was not a counterfactual fantasy. It really occurred.’

  • [image]

    ‘René Magritte: The Man in the Hat’ Review

    A documentary about the Belgian Surrealist is more rough sketch than fully realized portrait.

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    A Tech-Tudoresque Theater

    Jeanne Gang’s Writers Theatre uses new technologies to create a welcoming space that, while large. remains intimate.

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    How Ireland Made Its Own Look

    During a time of political transformation, artistic reinvention in Ireland.

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    More Than Hitchcock’s Handmaiden

    There’s more to Bernard Herrmann’s career than his celebrated scores for Hitchcock films.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Huang’s World’ Review: Food Journalism Goes Gonzo

    Eddie Huang serves up ethnography, politics and regional cuisines in equal measure in his Viceland series.

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    How Napoleon Crafted His Legacy While in Exile

    During his final years, the defeated general worked hard to ensure his legend lived on.

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    ‘JFK’ Review: On the Eve of Assassination

    At the Fort Worth Opera Festival, a look at the last night of John F. Kennedy’s life.

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    A Protean Rock God

    Crossing easily among different genres, Prince—who died Thursday at 57—did whatever he set his mind to do at least as well as any of his peers.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    The Cartography of Conversion

    Two maps separated in time but with a shared purpose: Christianizing China.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    Martha Graham Dance Company and Miami City Ballet Reviews

    A storied group celebrates its 90th anniversary; programs with uncommon depth at Lincoln Center.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    Little Tramp, Big Footprint

    Charlie Chaplin’s Swiss home has been turned into a museum honoring the film icon.

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    Finding Talent in the Fine Print at Coachella

    Coachella is still a place to find excellence, but you have to know where to look.

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    A Glib Commemoration

    An underwhelming centenary celebration for the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra.

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    ‘Elektra’ Review

    The final opera project by Patrice Chéreau emphasizes the family drama in Strauss’s take on the Greek tragedy.

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    A Fashion Designer’s True Colors

    A clothier’s passion for bold hues and reinvented materials.

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    Concert-Hall Electronica in Washington

    Mason Bates, the Kennedy Center’s first composer in residence, hopes to reach young listeners with a hybrid symphonic pops and new-music series.

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    Bowing to the Inevitable

    James Levine’s continuing health problems denied the Metropolitan Opera the leadership it needed and overshadowed a brilliant career.

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    Lusting After Fame and Fortune With Robert Mapplethorpe

    A dual retrospective of the work of controversial photographer Robert Mapplethorpe is a worthwhile effort, but one that exposes his limitations.

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    An Electronic King Goes His Own Way

    Dave Harrington’s new album is a showcase of the variety of styles and genres he’s mastered.

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    A History of Punk That’s Revved Up and Ready to Go

    A homecoming for the Ramones, a band that changed the music scene forever.

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    How the Netherlands Imported Beauty

    The Netherlands’ 17th-century fascination with exotic goods from foreign lands created a new aesthetic and cultural legacy.

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    The Afterlife of Pop Music

    A hotel in California keeps the music of the late 1940s, ’50s and early ’60s alive.

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    Post-Surrealism’s Forgotten Founder

    A look back at a leader of Post-Surrealism, which advocated rational connections among a painting’s elements.

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    A Jazz Teacher for the Ages

    David Baker helped lead the way for the acceptance of jazz in American higher education.

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    An Opera Company Matures in the Midwest

    Handel’s ‘Semele’ demonstrated both Opera Omaha’s ambitions and some of its challenges.

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    Dance Theatre of Harlem Review

    A program featuring ‘Divertimento,’ ‘Change,’ ‘Return’ and ‘Coming Together’ paints a picture of a company working to recapture the strength of its original incarnation.

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    The Janus-Faced Futurist

    How the Futurist Umberto Boccioni sought inspiration from the past.

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    The Surprising Story of Japanese Movie Musicals

    Exploring a vibrant genre that deserves wider recognition.

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    Marlboro Celebrates 50 Years on Tour

    Hitting the road with artists from a festival that keeps musical tradition alive.

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    Merle Haggard (1937-2016): Brilliance Born in a Boxcar

    Merle Haggard was a musical pioneer, foreshadowing outlaw country and country rock.

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    Rapturous Revivals

    The lasting influence of a movement that desired poetic transport, oneness with the elemental.

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    Art and Music Meet at the Met

    Trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith and pianist Vijay Iyer team up on a new project.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    A Festival Where All Genres Are Welcome

    Classical, jazz, krautrock and more were on the bill at Big Ears.

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    Hope for Palmyra’s Future

    After Islamic State retreated last month, a plan to rebuild an ancient city.

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    Yiddish Theater: An American Pasttime

    An exhibition tells a story of assimilation by way of the theater.

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    Opera’s Changing Face

    ‘Orphic Moments’ and ‘De Materie’ offer a chance to examine the changing nature of the institutions that perform opera.

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    ‘Otis Was a Polar Bear’ Review

    The sound of Allison Miller and her ensemble Boom Tic Boom recalls classic drummer-led ensembles of 50 years ago.

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    Nelson Riddle as Composer, Not Arranger

    His ‘Cross Country Suite’ crafts classical music from the American vernacular.

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    ‘Death of a Salesman’ Review: The Poetry of Showing Life as It Is

    Baltimore’s Everyman Theater is doing something very out of the ordinary: performing a pair of American plays in repertory

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    ‘Captain America: Civil War’ Review: Worldly Concerns

    A brace of superhero luminaries confront the prospect of submitting to, of all things, international law.

    • Review: ‘Dark Horse’
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    ‘Dark Horse’ Review: The People’s Pony

    A British documentary about a group of commoners who dabble in the sport of kings.

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    ‘Wallander’ Review: Haunted and Dauntless

    In the show’s final season, Inspector Wallander faces an internal menace.

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    ‘Bombing Hitler’s Supergun’ Review: Trigger Warning

    Allied forces race to destroy a super weapon pointed at Central London.

  • Masterpiece

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    A Dance Filled With Mystery

    The story behind this bronze statue says that everything Shiva’s attackers hurled at him, he co-opted for his ‘Dance of Bliss.’

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    Painting a Death Sentence

    Max Beckmann’s ‘Christ and the Sinner,’ included in the Nazis’ ‘Degenerate Art’ show, eerily spoke to the moment.

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    A Short Step to Dictatorship

    Ronald Syme’s ‘The Roman Revolution,’ written under the cloud of fascism, is a compelling account of the decline of the Roman oligarchy in favor of a principate.

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    Aiming for Intimacy

    In Winslow Homer’s ‘The Army of the Potomac—A Sharp-Shooter on Picket Duty,’ the artist, as newsman, makes us silent witnesses.

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    Piecing Together Pleasure

    ‘Mosaic of the Epiphany of Dionysus’ depicts a god’s triumphant homecoming.

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    A Conscience in Crisis

    Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s ‘Crime and Punishment,’ 150 this year, revolves around a murder with a philosophic motive.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    Let Me Take You Down Creation’s Path

    How the Beatles’ ‘Strawberry Fields Forever’ found its enduring form.

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    An Introspective Interlude

    Despite the quiet mood of the Bruges Madonna, the only sculpture by Michelangelo to leave Italy during the artist’s lifetime has a tumultuous history.

  • Theater

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    ‘Tuck Everlasting’ Review: Youth, Wasted on the Old

    Natalie Babbitt’s acclaimed children’s novel about an immortal family comes to the stage.

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    ‘Shuffle Along’ Review: Half of Perfection

    A backstage musical about a theatrical triumph and its lasting legacy.

  • [image]

    ‘The Drew’ Review: A League of Extraordinary (and Ordinary) Gentlemen

    A basketball league in South Central Los Angeles doesn’t care if you’re LeBron James or a no-name—as long as you’ve got game.

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    ‘Long Day’s Journey Into Night’ Review: The Dying of the Light

    Jessica Lange is the powerful incarnation of Eugene O’Neill’s morphine-addicted matriarch.

  • [image]

    ‘The Father’ Review: A Parent’s Dark Descent

    Florian Zeller’s play follows a man’s slide into dementia.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Waitress’ Review: Skimpy on the Filling

    Adrienne Shelly’s film becomes a Broadway musical starring the talented Jessie Mueller.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Fully Committed’ Review: Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Party of Forty

    One man, dozens of roles in this show about an actor who takes reservations at an ultra-hip Manhattan restaurant.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘American Psycho: The Musical’ Review: Serial-Killer Chic

    Slick, sleek and empty, this one-joke musical drowns its message in false emotion.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Mary Page Marlowe’ Review: A Life, Deconstructed

    Tracy Letts’s touching new play finds beauty in one woman’s very average life

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    ‘Arcadia’ Review: Highbrow Whodunit

    An impressive production of Tom Stoppard’s play in an equally impressive new space.

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    ‘Hunting and Gathering’ Review

    A romcom about four New Yorkers is a testament to Brooke Berman’s talent.

  • Film

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    ‘The Jungle Book’ Review: Disney Goes Wild

    A live action remake of the animated classic turns up the drama while keeping the bushwhacked fun of the original.

    • Film Clip: ‘The Jungle Book’
    • Film Review: ‘Sing Street’
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    ‘Sing Street’ Review: A Boy-Meets-Girl Band

    Despite his lack of musical experience, an Irish high schooler starts a band to win a young woman’s affections.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Louder Than Bombs’ Review: Shimmering Images of a Loved One

    A family remembers and regroups in the wake of tragedy.

    • Film Clip: ‘Louder Than Bombs’
    • More Reviews: ‘Hardcore Henry’ | ‘Sweet Bean’
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    ‘Hardcore Henry’ Review: First-Person Frenzy

    A shooter’s guide to nonstop mayhem.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Sweet Bean’ Review: Lessons of a Legume

    An elderly woman in Japan finds new purpose in a job at a small food stand.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Everybody Wants Some!!’ Review: Dazed and Enthused

    Richard Linklater returns with a spirited remembrance of kids reveling in their final weekend before college classes start in the fall of 1980.

    • Film Clip: ‘Everybody Wants Some!!’
    • Film Review: The Dark Horse
    • A Time Capsule of 1980 Teenage Desire
  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘The Dark Horse’ Review: A Prodigy’s Gambit

    A chess master suffering from mental illness teaches underprivileged kids how to play the game.

    • Film Clip: ‘The Dark Horse’

  • Television

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    ‘Millennials: Growing Up in the 21st Century’ Review: A Generation of Innocents Lost

    Ovation’s six-part documentary following 22 children over 15 years is like a real-life version of ‘Boyhood’ but much more disturbing.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Seduced’ Review: Greetings from the Fempire

    As Lifetime’s new campaign to empower the modern American woman kicks off, ‘Seduced’ shows what she is up against.

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    ‘Rebellion’ Review: The Irish Rising As Women Saw It

    A miniseries celebrates the centenary of the Easter Rising.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Patton Oswalt: Talking for Clapping’ Review

    In a stand-up special on Netflix, Patton Oswalt confronts political correctness head-on.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Containment’ Review: Terminally Dull

    A virus outbreak in Atlanta leads to a massive quarantine and a struggle for survival for those trapped inside the cordon.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘The Night Manager’ Review: Le Carré in the Terror Era

    An ex-military Brit in Cairo is sucked into a vortex of arms-smuggling in AMC’s suspenseful spy thriller

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘The Girlfriend Experience’ and ‘Dice’ Reviews: Passion in Unexpected Places

    Starz’s drama about a high-end call girl is oddly mesmerizing, but Showtime’s comedy about Andrew ‘Dice’ Clay has more heart and heat

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Hunters’ Review: Intergalactic Sleeper Cells

    Syfy’s new series tries to dress up a humans vs. aliens story with real-world issues

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘The Last Panthers’ Review: Bonds, Brotherly And Criminal

    Diamond thieves, arms smugglers, and the forces that pursue them are just the start of the drama

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Nothing Left Unsaid: Gloria Vanderbilt & Anderson Cooper’ Review

    A film about the famed heiress is a story of endurance

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘The Story of God With Morgan Freeman’ Review: Pilgrimage, Sans Destination

    Nat Geo’s show is a meandering look at religion and the many ways humans have tried to understand their place in the universe

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    ‘Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures’ Review

    The creative life and controversial work of photographer Robert Mapplethorpe are the subject of this documentary

  • Sightings

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    Films for All Seasons

    Why has Hollywood forgotten about Broadway?

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    Rapping the Legend

    The ‘Hamilton’ backlash was inevitable.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    Pandering or Populism in the Arts

    Are cultural institutions responding to the wants and needs of their visitors, or simply trying to sell tickets?

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    The Prescience of a Political Novel

    Robert Penn Warren’s ‘All the King’s Men’ has never been more relevant.

  • Subscriber Content Read Preview

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    So You Think You Can Act on Broadway?

    Performers who want to move from screen to stage should prepare themselves for more than a change of venue.

注目記事ランキング What's This?
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記事へのアクセス数のほかフェイスブックやツイッターでのシェア回数、メールをもとにWSJ日本版で注目を集めている記事をランキングにまとめています

  • 1

    急襲されたパーティー 中国在留外国人の検挙劇

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  • 2

    フィレンツェ最富裕層、600年前と変わらず

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  • 3

    仮想現実、熱狂がもうすぐ冷める理由

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  • 4

    「悪天候で欠航」でも空港に足止めしません

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  • 5

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    ツイッターCEO「長年の手順を反省」

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    6位以下を表示

  • 6

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    HPのさらなる分社化・CSCとの合併へ

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  • 7

    米トイレ問題に「政府の口出し無用」

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  • 8

    印ルピー紙幣、4000枚に1枚が偽札?

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  • 9

    中国のゴーストタウン、政府庁舎も仲間入り

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  • 10

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    タリバン指導者殺害、米国はいかに実行したか

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