The beauty of serialized television is the continuity that flows through a long arc, connecting the adventures with a cohesive narrative that gets time to breathe and grow.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 Episode 4 solves the problem set up on Star Trek: Picard Season 3 Episode 3 and leaves us with all sorts of questions about the journey moving forward.
Simultaneously, it unmasks the saboteur, airs Shaw's issues, and allows Jack and Picard time to get comfortable in their new roles.
The two-pronged approach to the father-son bonding is elegant in design.
Five years ago, Picard was still biologically human, somewhat comfortable in his so-called retirement, and not at all unwilling to regale cadets with tales of his exploits, sprinkled liberally with wise adages about hope and teamwork and family.
In the present day, Ten Forward is only accessible on the holodeck, but it's the place Picard feels most comfortable sharing with Jack.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 Episode 4 solves the problem set up on Star Trek: Picard Season 3 Episode 3 and leaves us with all sorts of questions about the journey moving forward.
Simultaneously, it unmasks the saboteur, airs Shaw's issues, and allows Jack and Picard time to get comfortable in their new roles.
The two-pronged approach to the father-son bonding is elegant in design.
Five years ago, Picard was still biologically human, somewhat comfortable in his so-called retirement, and not at all unwilling to regale cadets with tales of his exploits, sprinkled liberally with wise adages about hope and teamwork and family.
In the present day, Ten Forward is only accessible on the holodeck, but it's the place Picard feels most comfortable sharing with Jack.
- 3/9/2023
- by Diana Keng
- TVfanatic
Three years after Palme d’Or-winning Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami passed away at the age of 76, Janus Films is rolling out a wide-ranging and lovingly designed touring retrospective of some of his seminal works. The new retrospective includes restorations of The Koker Trilogy, plus features like “Close-Up,” “Taste of Cherry,” “Shirin,” “24 Frames,” “ABC Africa,” “The Wind Will Carry Us,” “Ten,” and “Five.”
The new restorations were undertaken by the Criterion Collection and mk2 with contributions by Kiarostami’s son, Ahmad Kiarostami.
Born in 1940 in Tehran, the filmmaker first studied painting at the University of Tehran; later, he worked as a graphic designer and commercial director. Kiarostami credited a job in the film department at Kanun (the Centre for the Intellectual Development of Children and Young Adults) for shaping him into a filmmaker.
He made his first feature, “The Report,” in 1977, just two years before the 1979 revolution that saw so...
The new restorations were undertaken by the Criterion Collection and mk2 with contributions by Kiarostami’s son, Ahmad Kiarostami.
Born in 1940 in Tehran, the filmmaker first studied painting at the University of Tehran; later, he worked as a graphic designer and commercial director. Kiarostami credited a job in the film department at Kanun (the Centre for the Intellectual Development of Children and Young Adults) for shaping him into a filmmaker.
He made his first feature, “The Report,” in 1977, just two years before the 1979 revolution that saw so...
- 7/24/2019
- by Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
Los Angeles – His image, as a brooding heartthrob on the Fox-tv series “Beverly Hills, 90210,” was reflective of the early 1990s. Luke Perry represented both the image and the show, and he died on March 4th, 2019, after suffering a massive stroke on February 27th. He was only 52 years old.
Coy Luther “Luke” Perry III was born in Mansfield, Ohio, and set out for Los Angeles after graduating high school. He found work in soap operas in 1987 and ’88, with “Loving” and “Another World.” But he broke out big in 1990 as Dylan McKay on “Beverly Hills, 90210,” for his role as an outsider character in a high school gang that included Brandon Walsh (Jason Priestley), Brenda Walsh (Shannon Doherty), Kelly Taylor (Jenny Garth) and Steve Sanders (Ian Ziering). He left after Season Six, but came back to finish with the series for Seasons Nine and Ten.
Luke Perry in Chicago in 2012
Photo...
Coy Luther “Luke” Perry III was born in Mansfield, Ohio, and set out for Los Angeles after graduating high school. He found work in soap operas in 1987 and ’88, with “Loving” and “Another World.” But he broke out big in 1990 as Dylan McKay on “Beverly Hills, 90210,” for his role as an outsider character in a high school gang that included Brandon Walsh (Jason Priestley), Brenda Walsh (Shannon Doherty), Kelly Taylor (Jenny Garth) and Steve Sanders (Ian Ziering). He left after Season Six, but came back to finish with the series for Seasons Nine and Ten.
Luke Perry in Chicago in 2012
Photo...
- 3/4/2019
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
Susan Boyle, the iconic singer who made the “Got Talent” franchise a worldwide phenomenon a decade ago, was just whisked off of the “America’s Got Talent: The Champions” stage like rubbish during the season finale, and I’m not okay with that. After traveling all the way to America from her home in Scotland, this humble artist deserved better after being eliminated on Monday night. Do you agree with me that Susan was robbed of her time in the spotlight? Vote down in our poll below.
See Who won ‘America’s Got Talent: The Champions’: Shin Lim or Darci Lynne Farmer?
Even judge Simon Cowell, who was on the original “Britain’s Got Talent” Season 3 judging panel during Susan’s first audition in 2009, admitted in the “Champions” finale that she’s the reason for the show’s enormous success. “The Susan Boyle [audition] in particular went like crazy,” Simon...
See Who won ‘America’s Got Talent: The Champions’: Shin Lim or Darci Lynne Farmer?
Even judge Simon Cowell, who was on the original “Britain’s Got Talent” Season 3 judging panel during Susan’s first audition in 2009, admitted in the “Champions” finale that she’s the reason for the show’s enormous success. “The Susan Boyle [audition] in particular went like crazy,” Simon...
- 2/19/2019
- by Marcus James Dixon
- Gold Derby
Five years ago, Pearl Jam bassist Jeff Ament and his future wife Pandora visited the grave of Ament’s former bandmate Andrew Wood. Wood was the lead singer of grunge pioneers Mother Love Bone; his overdose in 1990 at the age of 24 forced Ament and guitarist Stone Gossard to regroup and build the band that would become Pearl Jam. Ament never forgot the frontman’s larger-than-life personality and the role he had in shaping Seattle rock.
But Wood’s grave was disappointing. “I was just like, ‘God, this should be so much more rad,...
But Wood’s grave was disappointing. “I was just like, ‘God, this should be so much more rad,...
- 8/8/2018
- by Nicole Brodeur
- Rollingstone.com
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