Cormac’s Corner: Fences

Stage plays adapted into film always raises a red flag immediately. There’s a danger of just “shooting the play,” which means the film is just two hours of actors trading long monologues while the camera remains generally inert. Unfortunately, “Fences” really hammers home the fundamental difference between theater and cinema, showing that the difficulty in…

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Oscars top contenders breakdown

For true cinephiles, the calendar year doesn’t end until late February. That’s when the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences honors the best in film from the previous year at the Academy Awards. Unfortunately, this means film buffs, including yours truly, have been forced to stay in the grueling, depressing mindset of 2016 two…

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Art Gallery Exhibit Focuses on History of RI Textile Industry and Slavery

  As part of Black History Month, the University of Rhode Island Fine Arts Center’s main gallery is showcasing “Invisible Bodies, Disposable Cloth: Rhode Island and Slavery, 1783-1850s,” now until Feb. 18. “Invisible Bodies” highlights the interwoven history of slavery and the Rhode Island textile industry. The exhibit is the collaborative work of a Rhode…

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Film Review: The Founder

I was infatuated with the concept of John Lee Hancock’s “The Founder”, the story of Ray Kroc and the beginnings of McDonald’s, since it was first announced in 2015. This is partly because I’m a rabid consumer of the fast food giant, probably to my overall detriment, but also because I was interested in seeing…

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