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(09/19/13 5:02pm)
Born in Ashland, Oregon, Forrest Kline spent most of his early life amidst the sunny weather of California, whose discernible influence can be heard in Hellogoodbye’s earlier yearning carefree days. Since then, they’ve toured with 3OH3!, released a cadre of covers from The Beatles to the Beach Boys, produced three studio albums and are about to go on tour again with Paramore and Metric.
(09/16/13 5:58pm)
Correction appended
After a summer of long-anticipated album releases and even some surprise ones (“Magna Carta Holy Grail,” anyone?), artists from all genres have begun putting out albums early in the fall to help transition into cooler weather. After all, autumn is a time for change, whether it’s a moodier sound or a more mature image. Check out the albums below, and maybe you’ll make a change to your playlists as well.
(09/12/13 5:17pm)
“Insidious: Chapter 2” is ridiculous, convoluted and incoherent, but somehow inexplicably enjoyable.
(09/11/13 2:02am)
Jonathan Goodman Levitt’s “Follow the Leader” is a refreshingly, absorbing documentary that portrays the political process at ground level where the inspiration is sparked.
(09/11/13 1:40am)
Jonathan Goodman Levitt’s new documentary “Follow the Leader” arrives in the District for a weeklong run at Angelika Mosaic through Sept. 12. The film follows three young conservative politicos D.J., Nick and Ben during the 2008 presidential election.
(08/27/13 8:16pm)
Adam Wingard’s “You’re Next” is a upper class, low down gritty slasher horror that cuts its teeth and bone into a small, seemingly well-to-do family come under siege in a home invasion from some ne’er do wells simply christened as The Animals.
(08/27/13 8:12pm)
For anglophiles, Jane Austen represents something of a pinnacle of writer embellishing her works with the kind of victorian frothiness one comes to expect from English literature; with expectations maybe being Charles Dickens or William Makepeace Thackeray. Though, the reading public has no doubt been enamored by her well-mannered books.
(08/23/13 1:12am)
Textbooks are quite annoying to purchase, especially when the back to school late rush hits the stores. The University store is usually too expensive for those in the market of the elusive “Psychology of the Scranton Wildebeest, 20th edition” and you get no significant payback from the books you do buy. But accumulating textbooks this year does not have to break your wallet. Instead, here are some suggestions so you can find a way to save a couple dollars in the pursuit of higher learning.
(08/16/13 10:16pm)
Naturally, a film released about the man who co-founded Apple and left behind a cult of devoted followers would be an honest portrayal of Steve Jobs, yes?
(08/09/13 9:56pm)
Linda Lovelace, the luminary scion of the American adult industry, was just a mere teenager when she began her short lived career. But that career included one of the most famous and profitable films in the history of pornography that was the slyly titled with a Nixonian satirical edge: “Deep Throat.”
(08/09/13 9:46pm)
Based on the popular young adult novels by Rick Riordan, the series of Percy Jackson books tells the tales of Poseidon’s son and his adventures at Camp Half-Blood.
(08/05/13 2:07am)
Well, here's a galumphing bon mot for "Bartlett's Familiar Quotations."
(08/05/13 2:05am)
It took a while before Woody Allen's European idyllic adventures of neurotic whimsy, captured in good spirit with "To Rome with Love" and "Midnight In Paris," eventually landed him back in the U.S.
(07/28/13 10:20pm)
Loud, crass, and puerile doesn't even begin to describe the visual terror that is "The To Do List."
(07/28/13 10:15pm)
Brittle, anguished and unruly.The Wolverine's demeanor hasn't much changed during his time in the movies. The battle-weary Logan has trudged through a ton of trouble in the "X-Men" films and eventually the popularity of the character warranted his own stand alone feature.
(07/20/13 5:47pm)
James Wan's "The Conjuring" is a film that proudly evinces the 70s style filmmaking of William Friedkin's "The Exorcist" and Andrew Douglas's "The Amityville Horror." Wan, whose past credits include the ambiguous "Saw" film which reveled in and essentially reinvigorated the torture porn genre, nonetheless still contained it's own thrills and unique atmospheric tension. And with each succeeding film he's sought to push that tension to it's limits. Utilizing a classicist perspective in the process.
(07/16/13 12:08am)
The premise for "Pacific Rim" is as simple as can be.
(07/02/13 1:04am)
The State of the Union is absolutely chaotic, but this is Roland Emmerich we're talking about: a master of putting global scale annihilation on the big screen. He creates explosions and biblical mayhem like Itzhak Perlman plays the violin. He's a virtuoso and yes, he's just that good.
(07/02/13 1:03am)
"World War Z" has had a rough time just making it to the cinemas this summer. Extensive reshoots and a third act re-write by Damon Lindelof ("Lost") as well as a cadre of other writers caused many to sell this one off as a hopeless endeavor.
(06/01/13 7:57pm)
Galleries of memories propel "Signs of Life," a living diorama filled with characters caught in the middle of the Holocaust.