Kathy Bates Bestrides Bad Santa 2 and the American Turdscape

Oh man, are we in a backlash on liberal, PC culture right now. I mean, if you can call electing the KKK’s and Nazi party’s greatest white hope to the highest office in the world a backlash. I can’t even count how many people — strangers, family, trolls — have…

Fantasia Barrino Talks Celebrity, Success, and Keeping It Real

The path to superstardom appears to have gotten a lot shorter in recent years, thanks in large part to a spate of TV talent shows that pluck people from obscurity and jettison them to the top of the charts. Those who don’t believe winning The Voice, America’s Got Talent, or…

The Best Things to Do in Broward and Palm Beach This Weekend

Friday How does one fight war without weapons? Ask the villagers of Nafune, Japan. Centuries ago in medieval Japan, villagers were about to be attacked by samurai warlord Uesugi Kenshin and his army. The townspeople had no weapons; instead, they beat gojinjo-daiko — a drum played by several people banging…

Muggling Along: Fantastic Beasts Conjures Too Little of the Potter Magic

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, written as an original screenplay by author J.K. Rowling, is an expansion of her Harry Potter universe, and a test: Without lovable, adolescent leads Harry, Hermione Grainger, and Ron Weasley, or the elaborate narrative backbone provided by Rowling’s novels, can the wizarding world…

A Biopic of a Distraught Journalist Does Too Little with Too Much

In one of the more bizarre coincidences of film scheduling, the brief life of a TV journalist whose biggest scoop was announcing her own death on air is recapitulated for the second time this year. Released in August, Robert Greene’s porous documentary Kate Plays Christine highlights the impossibility, even the…

Nocturnal Animals Strands Together Flashy Tales of Male Weakness

Tom Ford has entirely overstuffed his nesting-doll domestic drama-cum-thriller Nocturnal Animals, and yet I spent much of the film worrying that it might not have a point. Its aesthetic footprint is huge, but its impact decidedly small scale. That’s not always a bad thing; there’s a perverse elegance to so…

Ten People You See at Thanksgiving Dinner in South Florida

By now you and your family have probably made all your Thanksgiving Day preparations. The flights were booked long ago, the hotel rooms are reserved, the rides home from the airport have been planned, and the turkey is even in the freezer already. You’re completely prepared to welcome both local and long-distance family into your home for the holiday.

What Fox’s Pitch Gets So Right About Being a Pioneering Woman

It’s fun watching Ginny Baker be rude to people. I was hesitant to give a chance to Pitch, the new Fox series imagining the life and career of the (fictional) first woman to play Major League Baseball, because I feared Ginny would be impossibly noble, driven and hardworking — the…

With an Interior Epic, Ang Lee Gets Too Real for His Medium

Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk is a small film burdened with the epic, thanks to both its subject and its setting. Based on Ben Fountain’s 2012 novel, it depicts a day in the life of a young soldier (Joe Alwyn) briefly returning from Iraq to be honored with his squad…

Sci-Fi Epic Arrival Is Best When It Looks Within

One day, Denis Villeneuve will make a truly great movie. This is, apparently, a controversial opinion. Many out there feel strongly that the Canadian filmmaker has been leaping from triumph to triumph in recent years — with Sicario, Prisoners and Enemy under his belt — while some consider him a…

Interracial Marriage Drama Loving Stirs with Quiet Humility

With films like Take Shelter, Mud and even this spring’s somewhat uneven Midnight Special, Jeff Nichols has steadily built a filmography of terse beauty. With Loving, he tackles the kind of boldface subject matter that Oscar season feeds on: It’s a historical drama about the 1967 Supreme Court decision that…

Ten Best Art Galleries in Broward County

The South Florida art scene has never been hotter, and Florida’s arguably most cultural region is sizzling with creativity. Many might attribute this to Miami’s flourishing Wynwood District and December’s notable Art Basel Miami Beach, and while this certainly rings true, please don’t let Miami’s artsy hub take all…