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Latest Articles
Cinematic excess
Eight years after its completion, The Cremaster Cycle , Matthew Barney's interminable multi-media opus, continues to befuddle and intrigue audiences.
Matthew Barney's seven-hour Cremaster Cycle descends in the Portland Museum of Art
By
ANNIE LARMON
| November 12, 2010
Is the Boston Film Festival on the road to recovery?
In recent years, the Boston Film Festival has alternated between catastrophe and semi-revival.
Or is it flirting with disaster?
By
PETER KEOUGH
| September 10, 2010
Stuff and nonsense
Despite millions in production design, Peter Strietman's splendid photography, and some witty if trance-inducing music by Jonathan Bepler, the six and a half hours of Matthew Barney's Cremaster Cycle is sheer movie tedium, inert and unmoving, broken u
Matthew Barney's Cremaster Cycle returns
By
PETER KEOUGH
| June 25, 2010
Grave Spotting
I asked the question this way: "Where would you want to be buried?" Not "do," but "would." That is to say if, by chance, you were to die, unlikely as that might be, where would you want to spend all of nonexistence?
Spooky? A bit, but Massachusetts's cemeteries are also the bucolic, final resting places of many great American writers.
By
NINA MACLAUGHLIN
| June 18, 2010
Eat, pray, shove
So after all the roarings and the thumpings and the garlands and the scandals, after all the sex and the jazz and the fires on the moon and the women’s-libbers howling for his blood and the glass bouncing off Gore Vidal’s head, the old lion ends his days
Cooking with Mailer in two new memoirs
By
JAMES PARKER
| April 02, 2010
Updike does death, R. Crumb does God, Vanity Fair does Proust
Trying to reach as broad a range of tastes and pocketbooks as possible, we this year scavenged everything from the front pages of the Onion to R. Crumb's genesis, to valedictory Updike. Stuff to read, stuff to look at, glossy pages and matte. Remember
Gift books to savor
By
PHOENIX STAFF
| December 11, 2009
Vegas and Jungleland
Paul Shaffer is a happenin’ cat. Pick an It Moment from pop culture over the past 30 years and Shaffer was there. He was an original band member on Saturday Night Live . He played hapless promo guy Artie Fufkin in This Is Spinal Tap . Disco? He co-wr
Paul Shaffer and the Big Man tell all
By
JOYCE MILLMAN
| November 27, 2009
Plain talk
Jesse Sheidlower, an editor-at-large of the Oxford English Dictionary , an expert in slang, and the author of The F-Word , can't stop talking about fuck.
Jesse Sheidlower gives the f-word its due
By
JUSTINE ELIAS
| September 18, 2009
Deal or no deal?
When the Boston Newspaper Guild, the Boston Globe 's largest union, decided to take the New York Times Company's latest contract offer to its members last week, ratification seemed like a done deal.
Will the Globe 's biggest union balk at the Times Co.'s offer? Plus, the Christian Science Monitor 's quietly successful re-launch, and sportswriter Bill Simmons's GM jones
By
ADAM REILLY
| May 15, 2009
Alive and well
The seventh annual Independent Film Festival of Boston
The seventh annual Independent Film Festival of Boston
By
| April 17, 2009
Review: Pontypool
Bruce McDonald's ambitious shaggy-dog story combining elements of Talk Radio , William Burroughs, and Night of the Living Dead succeeds about as well as could be expected.
Bruce McDonald deserves some credit for trying
By
PETER KEOUGH
| April 17, 2009
Stopped, dropped, and rolled
I’d like to thank and commend Adam Reilly for writing about the journalists arrested covering the Republican convention in St. Paul.
Letters to the Boston editor, October 17, 2008
By
BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS
| October 16, 2008
Norman Mailer’s ‘White Negro’ gets the treatment
Long before suburban kids began digging Dr. Dre and Tupac, an earlier generation of young white people venerated the jazz and swing music of the 1920s, ’30s, and ’40s.
Action speaks!
By
IAN DONNIS
| October 15, 2008
Hit men
At least one passage in Four Kings will get George Kimball cursed out in local bars.
George Kimball's Four Kings KO's the last golden era of boxing
By
MARK JURKOWITZ
| October 02, 2008
War stories
“We will be fighting for forty years.” Reading those words at the end of Norman Mailer’s 1968 Miami and the Siege of Chicago , you can’t help but feel a chill.
Mailer on the ’68 conventions
By
CHARLES TAYLOR
| August 19, 2008
Smoke screens
What does it say about America that marijuana movies are a hot genre right now, perhaps hotter even than in the heyday of Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong’s 1978 Up in Smoke ?
Does a surge of stoner movies mean America is going to pot?
By
PETER KEOUGH
| August 13, 2008
Sweet reads
Here, listed alphabetically by author, are 10 of the best works of fiction, non-fiction, and poetry the Phoenix wrote about in 2007.
Books: 2007 in review
By
JON GARELICK
| December 17, 2007
Cracking the nutcase
Since Colbert is making fun of know-it-all, combative, mean-spirited talk-show hosts, except when he is going after targets such as Bush, he isn’t Rambo-like.
Letters to the editor
By
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
| November 28, 2007
Noah’s arc
William Faulkner conceived The Sound and the Fury from a mental picture of a pair of women’s underpants dangling on a clothesline.
Baumbach from Squid to Margot
By
GERALD PEARY
| November 20, 2007
Wrestle in peace
In a life of many garlands and much renown, it was Mailer’s strange engagement with literary destiny always to be trapped on the wrong side of his art.
Remembering Mailer, the blustery king of American letters
By
JAMES PARKER
| November 14, 2007
A hello to arms
“Get psyched! Get PISSED!”
In a New Hampshire tourney, our reporter takes arm wrestling down to its basics: power, triceps, and Kahlua beach balls
By
JAMES PARKER
| October 17, 2007
Armies of the light
Maybe the trauma of another intractable war has sparked the movies’ recent interest in ’60s headliners.
Norman Mailer’s primal screen at the HFA
By
PETER KEOUGH
| September 18, 2007
That pesky First Amendment
It’s going to be really tough topping the Bush Administration’s efforts to trash the US Constitution.
The feds seek tight restrictions on religious readings in prison¬
By
PHILLIPE AND JORGE
| September 12, 2007
Bouncers tell all
A young man of my acquaintance, a callow pube of a London club-goer, got himself bounced not long ago from an establishment on the King’s Road.
Tales from behind the velvet rope
By
JAMES PARKER
| August 22, 2007
Straight outta Kafka
We want to get into the shower and not emerge until November 2008.
The Bushies’ enthusiasm for torture is indefensible
By
PHILLIPE AND JORGE
| July 25, 2007
The sound and the Führer
Having taken on such larger-than-life figures as Marilyn Monroe, Gary Gilmore, Pablo Picasso, Jesus Christ, and, of course, Norman Mailer, Norman Mailer now essays “the most mysterious human being of the century,” Adolf Hitler.
Mailer takes on young Adolf
By
PETER KEOUGH
| January 31, 2007
Not TV
Big names, new names, and a handful of poets provide worthwhile reading this winter to distract you from the Sopranos reruns on A&E.
Mailer, Lethem, Amis, Ashbery deliver good reads
By
JOHN FREEMAN
| December 28, 2006
My Ellen Willis
When I was a queer teenager in suburban New Jersey in the early 1960s, I decided that I wanted to be Susan Sontag.
Making sense of a woman who was always two or three steps ahead of the Zeitgeist
By
MICHAEL BRONSKI
| November 30, 2006
Ground zero
This article originally ran in the January 13, 1987 issue of the Boston Phoenix .
Platoon gets down to too little
By
OWEN GLIEBERMAN
| August 10, 2006
Flashbacks: April 28, 2006
These selections, culled from our back files, were compiled by Chris Brook and Jessica McConnell.
The Boston Phoenix has been covering the trends and events that shape our times since 1966.
By
EDITORIAL
| April 28, 2006
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
Boston Ballet's 'Simply Sublime'
Road to the city
Moving on with Stephie Coplan & the Pedestrians
Turning the page
On the Cheap: Maximo's Takeout
Another worthy addition to Watertown's culinary arsenal
Why the Republican embrace of just one Catholic issue is the height of hypocrisy
Come to Jesus
Activists rail at the T
Bumpy Ride Dept.
At home with Sharon Van Etten
Lady and her Tramp
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