Superman Returns review
Superman Returns Directed by Bryan Singer With Brandon Routh, Kevin Spacey, Kate Bosworth Rated PG-13 Now playing
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Superman Returns Directed by Bryan Singer With Brandon Routh, Kevin Spacey, Kate Bosworth Rated PG-13 Now playing
My Super Ex-Girlfriend Directed by Ivan Reitman With Uma Thurman, Luke Wilson Rated PG-13 Now playing
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest Directed by Gore Verbinski With Johnny Depp, Keira Knightley, Orlando Bloom Rated PG-13 Now playing
For the second time this fall, Ryan Reynolds stars in a comedy as a sardonic wiseass beside Anna Faris and a large supporting cast. But unlike his chain-restaurant-inspired, twenty-something-slacker film "Waiting...," which served up poor comedic timing and misguided casting, his newest movie, "Just Friends," is a welcoming place to be.
With the coming of November, the leaves began falling and the air started cooling, but Monday night it was "Summertime" at the Kennedy Center, as the Washington National Opera performed Gershwin's American classic, "Porgy and Bess."
The Katzen Arts Centers' Oct. 14 inaugural performance went on in front of a capacity crowd in the Abramson Family Recital Hall. The concert, titled "The American Five" for the five AU faculty composers that were part of it, featured a plethora of diverse instrumentation, synthesized musical technology and even a politically charged presentation, making for an engaging but often uneven performance.
While watching "Waiting...," a new comedy starring Ryan Reynolds, the audience will probably start to have thoughts that evoke the movie's title. Some of these thoughts may include, "I can't believe I waited in line for this," or "I don't think I will wait to go to the bathroom," or - most popularly - "I can't wait until this movie is over." The premise is not a bad one, and many of the actors portraying the misfits and rejects who work at Shenanigan's restaurant are veterans of past successful comedies. For a variety of reasons, however, "Waiting..." doesn't work.
On Monday, the Intercultural Management Institute welcomed "Children's Art From Around The World" to American University. The exhibit, which runs in McKinley Hall through December, was made possible by The International Child Art Foundation (ICAF), a non-profit organization that promotes children's creativity and the arts both nationally and internationally.
The Queens of the Stone Age brought their searing sound of big drums and bigger guitars to the 9:30 club on Sunday in support of their third major studio release, "Lullabies to Paralyze."
The Kogod School of Business was ranked No. 42 by the 2004 Wall Street Journal/Harris Interactive survey of the top 50 business schools in the country after finishing as a runner-up last year.
For many students who attend AU, their college years are a journey for valuable information and tools that prepare them for their careers throughout the world. Neil Kerwin, AU's provost, discovered early that he would not have to travel the world in search of a career. His calling was at AU, his alma mater, all along.