th birthday party like this before.
When Guild Hall, the East Hampton arts center, opens this summer, it’s going to celebrate its milestone birthday with a season packed with heavy hitting programming including theater, visual art, film, dance, and more.
On May 23, the season at Guild Hall will open with a virtual poetry performance piece called “Reawakenings,” which will be directed by Paul Hecht and will feature an all-star cast including Salman Rushdie, Cherry Jones, Michael Stuhlbarg, Mercedes Ruehl, and more each performing a poem that’s paired with a piece from the institution’s permanent collection of visual art.
The Matrix. An everyday everyman, Mr Anderson leads a double life. By day, he is a software engineer for a large company, but, at night, he takes on the role of a computer hacker named Neo. His nocturnal activities put him into the orbit of Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne), a subversive hacker wanted by the police around the world. Those same authorities also take an interest in Thomas, however, something seems off about their interrogation. Suddenly, he’s face-to-face with Morpheus and give the option of seeing the world “as it really is”. Turns out, the “life” he’s living is just a virtual reality simulator created by machines in a nightmare future some 200 years hence.
MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE: REVELATION Enlists Composer Bear McCreary; Kevin Smith Shares Score Preview
Though we re still waiting on a trailer for Netflix s
Masters of the Universe: Revelation, Kevin Smith has announced that the great Bear McCreary is on board as composer, and shared a cue from his score.
RorMachine |
2/8/2021
Masters of the Universe: Revelation, and while we re still waiting on that first trailer, the
Clerks director has now taken to Twitter to make an announcement that should please
He-Man fans.
The great Bear McCreary (T
he Walking Dead, Battlestar Galactica, Godzilla: King of the Monsters) is on board as the show s composer, and Smith has shared a preview of his score for the Transformation scene.
Film Reviews
Whatever happened to The Future? You’re living in it (sorry for the mess we weren’t expecting company). Just clear a spot among the discarded red hats and empty Mountain Dew liters and have a seat, because we’re going to talk 1990s cyberpunk cinema.
Back in the ’90s, we had a different vision for The Future (aka the 2000s). Yes, it was also dystopian AF, but at least it looked cool and the tech was awesome. Instead of sleek,black-leather suits and flying cars, what do we have in 2021? Neon Crocs and Bluetooth butt plugs. Lame.