Lauderdale Comics Hosts Its First Facebook Live Event

By the time we hit the holiday season, we may look back and say 2016 was the year of the comic book. This year alone we’ve already seen Superman vs. Batman, Suicide Squad, Captain America: Civil War, X-Men: Apocalypse, and Deadpool hit the big screen. More than ever, Hollywood is…

Ten Reasons Lighthouse Point Is the Best Beach in Broward

Throughout the summer, “Best Beaches” will highlight the best beach spots Broward has to offer. Don’t agree? Check back next week; your favorite beach in Broward could be next. Who doesn’t like rooting for the underdog? You know the saying it’s not the size of the dog in the fight, it’s…

Netflix’s The Get Down Makes You Wonder How It Keeps from Going Under

The Bronx is burning in the introductory episodes of The Get Down, Netflix’s new series that presents as urban-cinematic fable the genesis of rap. The cluttered, over-caffeinated 90-minute pilot, directed by creator and executive producer Baz Luhrmann, takes place in the summer of 1977, when a serial killer terrorized New…

Ellen Page Kidnaps an Infant in Tallulah, but She Means Well

Ellen Page’s complicated onscreen relationship with children continues in Tallulah, which reverses the Juno dynamic — this time her title character wants a kid who isn’t hers. Orange Is the New Black scribe Sian Heder makes her directorial debut with the sympathetic indie, a maternal character study that loses its…

Allison Janney Talks Tallulah, Mom and Motherhood

Allison Janney is deflecting questions about herself to proclaim the talent and intelligence of her Tallulah co-star Ellen Page, whom she already step-mothered onscreen in 2007’s Juno, when she suddenly interrupts herself. “Oh my god,” she says. “I’ve been talking since six this morning. I’m bleary-eyed from all the conversations…

Best Things to Do in Broward and Palm Beach This Week

Friday, August 12 Making edgy comedy means poking fun at taboo subjects without offensively “punching down” at vulnerable communities. Only a few comics have the skill to navigate that narrow territory. Anjelah Johnson is one. But it hasn’t always been that way. Johnson’s act is mostly clean, but the characters…

In Life, Animated, Disney Helps an Autistic Mind Connect

This quietly moving doc has a hook worthy of the most shameless of Hollywood weepies, offering tragedy and a miracle and much ado about the power of movies themselves. But the film is tender and patient, as fascinated by the challenges of daily life as it is by the dramatic…

In Gleason, an NFL Hero Faces ALS and the Loss of His Body

With unflagging honesty and compassion, Clay Tweel’s documentary Gleason charts the journey of former New Orleans Saints safety Steve Gleason as he copes with the ruinous nerve disease ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s Disease. That description, however, can’t quite do justice to Tweel’s film, which is partly built around video journals…

So You Wanna Be a Gold Coast Derby Grrl?

“Intense. Family. Drive.” That’s the derby culture summed up in three words, at least according to Jessie Alvarez, better known by her derby alias, Kine Lee Killz, of Gold Coast Derby Grrls. Pioneered out of the Riot Grrrl movement of underground punk feminism in Austin, Texas, in the early 2000s,…

The Low-Key Pete’s Dragon Dares to Mostly Let Its Beast Chill

Pete’s Dragon is as cuddly as the mountains of plush toys Disney hopes to sell from it. A disarmingly homespun blockbuster, this loose remake of the studio’s 1977 live-action/animation hybrid is perhaps best defined by all the things it’s not: It’s not a soaring action flick, nor an indulgence in…

Ten Reasons Dania Beach Is the Best Beach in Broward

Throughout the summer, “Best Beaches” will highlight the best beach spots Broward has to offer. Don’t agree? Check back next week; your favorite beach in Broward could be next.  Dania Beach is the unquestioned middle child of Broward country beaches. It doesn’t have the flashy ‘Hollywood’ name, and it certainly…

The Little Prince Gets Expanded Onscreen, but Not Corrupted

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s The Little Prince, published in 1943, might stand as a children’s classic, but it’s not-so-secretly a story for grown-ups. Kids have long been drawn to the book’s dreamy sense of wonder, to the golden-haired star-child of the title, but Saint-Exupéry’s ruminations on regret, solitude and loss belong…