Review: As You Like It
Set on a modern stage with quick-witted banter and occasional drama, Shakespeare Theatre Company’s “As You Like It” provides its audience with dramatic romance portrayed through laughter.
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Set on a modern stage with quick-witted banter and occasional drama, Shakespeare Theatre Company’s “As You Like It” provides its audience with dramatic romance portrayed through laughter.
“Dirty Dancing” is widely considered a classic movie that has the right amount of drama, comedy, romance, and of course, dancing. In “Dirty Dancing: The Classic Story on Stage,” however, it was mostly dancing and comedy.
Horror movies have become so formulaic that new ones struggle to find original ground to cover. The genre has fallen into formulaic letdowns that are as predictable and susceptible to ridicule as romantic comedies. “As Above, So Below”, directed by John Erick Dowdle (“Quarantine”), is no exception. With cinematography reminiscent of “The Blair Witch Project” and “Paranormal Activity,” the film fails to introduce anything new or memorable to the genre of horror and suspense.
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Director Jim Mickle and co-writer Nick Damici only watched the Spanish horror film “We Are What We Are” before working on their script for the 2013 remake. His take the horror film tells the story a family that keeps to itself with a dark secret that comes to light during the events of the film.
We all know the story: smart kid dabbles in gambling out of financial necessity. Smart kid becomes rich and gets sucked into the world where the stakes are high and learns he can reap even more rewards. But this ultimately results in an irreparable downfall.
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A film about a girl wanting a bike is not the usual story of gaudy glamour often found in any given Hollywood blockbuster.