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Reel-to-reel: A long-lost Malcolm X speech recovered
I was born just two years before Spike Lee's 1992 biopic about Malcolm X and starting in kindergarten, I have faced the question in an almost endless loop: are you named after him?
History Dept.
By
MALCOLM BURNLEY
| February 10, 2012
End Black History Month
It's that time again! Let's roll out the black history materials and talk about African-Americans as if most people really care about them, during the shortest month of the year.
Diverse-city
By
SHAY STEWART-BOULEY
| February 03, 2012
Interview: Wim Wenders takes 3D one step further
Some are surprised that Wim Wenders, like fellow veteran of the '70s New German Cinema Werner Herzog, has embraced something as newfangled as 3D.
Pina envy
By
PETER KEOUGH
| January 20, 2012
Review: The Flowers of War
In 1937 the invading Imperial Japanese Army killed and raped thousands of people in the Chinese city of Nanjing. The atrocity has recently inspired two Chinese films, including Lu Chuan's City of Life and Death and this unimpressive outing from Zhang
Unimpressive outing from Zhang Yimou
By
PETER KEOUGH
| January 20, 2012
The Making of Paul LePage, Part 2
Governor Paul LePage has made plenty of waves in his first year in office, and has many wondering where his sometimes provocative political attitudes come from. In this two part series we ask: who is Paul LePage?
Rise to Power
By
COLIN WOODARD
| January 20, 2012
Review: Young Goethe in Love
In Philipp Stölzl's fanciful portrait of the artist as a young scamp, the future genius (Alexander Fehling) introduces himself as "Goethe with an 'oe'," earning a reputation as a pratfalling screw-up.
Philipp Stölzl's portrait of the artist as a young scamp
By
PETER KEOUGH
| January 20, 2012
Review: The Artist(1)
The advent of talking pictures sends a screen idol into both a career nosedive and an identity crisis in Michel Hazanavicius's flashback to Hollywood's transitional period of the late '20s.
Michel Hazanavicius's flashback to '20s-era Hollywood
By
BETSY SHERMAN
| December 23, 2011
Review: From the Back of the Room
Chronicling the past 30 years of women in DIY punk, Amy Oden's documentary deconstructs the myth that punk is an ideal world free of gender prejudices.
Amy Oden's documentary about sexism in the punk rock community
By
LIZ PELLY
| December 09, 2011
Review: J. Edgar
Filmmaker Clint Eastwood, famously Republican, portrays right-wing hero J. Edgar Hoover, the late FBI head, as a self-aggrandizing, conniving bully and mama's boy who broke the law whenever he wanted to bring anyone down.
DiCaprio as right-wing hero J. Edgar Hoover
By
GERALD PEARY
| November 11, 2011
The ugly side of Providence’s 375th birthday
I do not envy the person assigned with reducing 375 years of Providence history to four words.
Histories
By
PHILIP EIL
| October 14, 2011
Prohibition drinking game!
Leave it to Ken Burns and PBS to crash our romantic Boardwalk Empire fantasies with a scholarly five-and-a-half-hour, sepia-tinted tome about the rip-roaring Twenties.
Play along with the upcoming Ken Burns documentary
By
CHRIS FARAONE
| September 30, 2011
Our quirky, compelling senator
Any faithful reader of the Providence Journal is familiar with the talents of G. Wayne Miller — a reporter with a remarkable knack for storytelling.
Profiles
By
DAVID SCHARFENBERG
| September 30, 2011
Review: Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame
The latest action epic from Hong Kong new wave director Tsui Hark ( Once Upon a Time in China ) is a fact-based historical drama set in 689 AD, a period when "all hell was about to break loose," according to the dense narration that opens the film.
Exhilarating action
By
BRETT MICHEL
| September 23, 2011
Teaching 9/11
"What do you know about 9/11?"
Textbook Tragedy
By
THOMAS PAGE MCBEE
| September 09, 2011
Before Irene, the Hurricane of ’38
The winds kicked up near the West African coast and shot across the Atlantic Ocean. Two weeks later, they barreled past Puerto Rico and turned north.
Calamities
By
DAVID SCHARFENBERG
| September 02, 2011
The dashing pirate of Providence
Casey Dorman of Providence was walking to work on the stone wharfs of Rockport, Massachusetts one day this summer when he crossed paths with Johnny Depp, fresh off another box-office conquest as Captain Jack Sparrow in the latest of the Pirates of the
Urban swashbuckler
By
MALCOLM BURNLEY
| September 02, 2011
On carpentry and college
Age 30, I quit the Phoenix and ended up with a job as an apprentice to a carpenter. Sawing, chiseling, hammering, nail-gunning, tiling, sanding, slotting, framing, hauling, measuring, and sweeping are less obvious outcomes of an undergraduate career in
Finding reward - and real learning - in the ivory tower
By
NINA MACLAUGHLIN
| September 02, 2011
Review: The Disappearance of McKinley Nolan
An investigative doc brimming with cultural resonance and historical savvy, Henry Corra's film has ahold of a pungent story — that of the titular black Texan fella who vanished in Vietnam 40 years ago.
Rich in mysteries
By
MICHAEL ATKINSON
| September 02, 2011
Review: Sholem Aleichem: Laughing in the Darkness
Not many these days are familiar with Aleichem's own story, or his other work, or his impact on Jewish culture and literature in general.
Joseph Dorman's portrait of Aleichem
By
PETER KEOUGH
| September 02, 2011
Why there won't ever be another 'Big Four' - and why that's a good thing
In April, thrash metal's self-billed "Big Four" — Metallica, Slayer, Megadeth, and Anthrax — played a one-off American show in the middle of the desert in Indio, California.
The state of metal
By
DANIEL BROCKMAN
| August 26, 2011
Fantasy camp
Wizards & Warriors Camp is a living video game, putting kids in control of everything from plotline to character personality.
Where Lord of the Rings meets Lord of the Flies
By
ARIEL SHEARER
| August 12, 2011
The Oracle Engine
The lizard of the wasteland, so dazzling to the eye, so rapid to flee or to strike, may grow to its full maturity only in the most brutal of deserts, where no dew falls to drink and where the sun is unrelenting. So, some say, was Marcus Furius Medullinu
Excerpted from the short story by M.T. Anderson
By
M.T. ANDERSON
| July 22, 2011
Tales of the Providence Ghost Tour
You know what you get when you're a 375-year-old New England city where many homes are known more for their past occupants than their current ones? Ghosts. Lots of ghosts.
Hauntings
By
DANIEL MCGOWAN
| July 15, 2011
John Sayles on novels, movies and US history
It is high noon and writer and director John Sayles is doing what he does best: telling stories and giving directions.
A good Amigo
By
JOHN J. KELLY
| June 24, 2011
RISD's 'Cocktail Culture' offers an intoxicating history of 20th-century fashion
Across the country, on January 16, 1920, citizens drank up at liquor "wakes" before the 18th Amendment, ratified a year before, went into effect at midnight, banning the manufacture, sale, and transportation of "intoxicating liquors."
The high life
By
GREG COOK
| May 13, 2011
Rewriting the history of capitalism
Brown University president Ruth Simmons has made it hard to ignore the school's ties to slavery — and by extension, the ties of well-known Providence families.
Revisions
By
MARION DAVIS
| April 01, 2011
Cambridge author Caleb Neelon traces graffiti's hidden history
'TAKI 183' SPAWNS PEN PALS, announced the headline in the July 21, 1971, New York Times .
It was written
By
GREG COOK
| April 01, 2011
A look at Portland's graffiti history
Back in the early '90s, Eli Cayer had just finished art school in Boston and headed to Maine, where he continued creating street art.
City walls
By
JEFF INGLIS
| April 01, 2011
Review: 'European Drawings' at the Portland Museum of Art
"European Drawings" is the Portland Museum of Art's contribution to "Where to Draw the Line: the Maine Drawing Project," a year-long series of historical and contemporary drawing exhibitions at 16 Maine galleries and art institutions.
Historic drawings sketch the way to greater art
By
NICHOLAS SCHROEDER
| April 01, 2011
Trading sexual histories
"How many guys have you been with?"
Failure
By
KARL STEVENS
| March 25, 2011
Friends' Activity
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Anarchistic and self-trained, are street medics the future of first aid?
Medic alert
The Overdub Tampering Committee
How a group of Boston musicians exacted their weird price from the world of online music sharing — without actually doing a thing
May you and Portlandia be very happy together!
O! Lucky you!
Out: Preparing for one H.E.L.L. of a weekend in Cambridge
Protecting your interests
Valentine's Day for the Frugal and Savvy Diner
Avoiding the V-Day fine-dining shit-show
Moving on with Stephie Coplan & the Pedestrians
Turning the page
Love Hurts: Emo Valentine's Day Cards
Ease the pain of heartbreak with these clip-and-save Valentines
Activists rail at the T
Bumpy Ride Dept.
At home with Sharon Van Etten
Lady and her Tramp
You gotta fight for your right
. . . to evaluate the quality of various college parties (and assign a grade accordingly)
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