There's been a lot of chatter this year about superhero fatigue. Are audiences tired of all the capes and wham-bam-punch stuff? Or, are critics just tired of writing about them? Despite some prominent flops, it's looking like we'll finish the year with three superhero flicks in the box-office top 10. That's a lot of revenue for a failing genre. Possessing no special powers myself, I don't know what the future holds. But I do know this: It's certainly fun to think about superheroes being supplanted by—well, anything else! As I've noticed certain patterns and repetitions playing out on the big screen: It's been a year of French courtroom dramas (of which there have been two very good ones), auteur-driven biopics, and soon, a year of hit men. Also, Sandra Hüller is amazing. Replace the whole MCU with Sandra Hüller. |
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The style is as timeless—and timely—as ever. |
| There's a reason why everyone is sale shopping early this year. |
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The fashion photographer on the places, venues, and vibes that give this dynamic Canadian city a special place in his heart. |
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| The national legislature has us reeling toward a government shut down next week. One senator has severed the chain of command in the armed forces. Neither of these current legislative catastrophes has to do with their actual subject matter. The shutdown will happen because the House of Representatives is paralyzed over issues that have practically nothing to do with government spending. The military hierarchy is threadbare because of issues that have nothing to do with national defense. The cult of zygote-worship has destroyed the GOP at the polls, and now it appears ready to wreck the Republicans in Congress, and to take the rest of us down with them. | |
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| The things they didn't know they wanted. |
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| On God's dry land she is a twenty-five-year-old ex-Floridian who earned Phi Beta Kappa at Lake Forest College and who is now closing fast on a Ph.D. in comparative lit. from New York University. In hell's cold water she is an even greater astonishment: the world's first-ranked woman in marathon swimming, a sport that rarely shows up on the sports page, one in which nobody earns $100,000 a year, and which never is on television Monday nights. Though she'd prefer not to, Diana Nyad will go those twenty-five miles for nothing, or at least not for a lot of money. She will go for other reasons. These reasons are found in Diana Nyad's account of the big swim. |
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