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Writer-director Jane Schoenbrun's new film, "I Saw the TV Glow," is a horror/sci-fi/coming-of-age story about the friendship of two teen outcasts. The film premiered at this year's Sundance Film Festival and opens in theaters this weekend.
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“Hello Beautiful” by Ann Napolitano is a richly woven novel about the complex bonds of family and friendship. It lays bare our vulnerabilities as human beings, exposing the power of relationships and how deeply the past can shape the present.
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“The Beekeeper,” Jason Statham’s latest bang, bang, shoot ‘em up plot, gets two thumbs down in KPCW’s Friday Film Review. Mark Harrington says the action flick is not a worthy transition from the more art-house-film world of Sundance.
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An audience favorite from this year’s Sundance Film Festival, "Thelma," is an uplifting film that follows a 93-year-old woman on a quest for justice.
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For the first time ever, local artists have leased space they can call their own for the next three years. The grand opening of Create PC happens Thursday.
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The award-winning film “Poor Things” is picturesque, funny, absurd and disturbing. It sounds like the right film to lead into the Sundance Film Festival.
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Author Nikki Erlick’s debut novel “The Measure” is an intriguing story about fate and how it weaves together eight ordinary people who need to make extraordinary choices.
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“The Boys in the Boat” is a film based on the bestselling book of the same name. It is an unforgettable, true story of group of young men battling against incredible odds.
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This week’s Friday Film Review focuses on “Wonka,” the third big screen adaptation of the 1964 children’s novel “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” and determines whether this version is naughty or nice.
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Set in a fictional New England boys boarding school during the holidays, "The Holdovers" is a new comedy/drama that reunites "Sideways" director Alexander Payne and lead Paul Giamatti.
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This week’s Friday Film Review features “Godzilla Minus One,” starring the King of the Monsters just shy of his 70th birthday.
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Many of us are observing what feels like a greater ideological divide between neighbors than at any time in recent memory. Now we have Heather Cox Richardson, an American economic and Boston College history professor to explain that divide in her new book, "Democracy Awakening: Notes on the State of America."