Culture

‘Leap!’ puts exclamation point on chasing your dreams

Ballet enthusiasts of all ages -- and everyone else -- should jump at the chance to see this charming animated film set in 1880s France. The colorful, fluid details make the movie a visual wonder.

Movie review: Good Time

Gritty and intense, the ironically titled crime drama "Good Time" (A24) actually charts some very grim hours in the lives of its central characters. In doing so, the film conducts viewers on a journey through a bleak urban landscape many entertainment oriented moviegoers may not care to visit.

Book collects John Paul II’s notes from 41 years of spiritual retreats

Only nine years after his death, he was declared a saint. This book aims to explain the pope's spirituality in his own words, but it falls short.

In ‘Logan Lucky,’ think ‘Ocean’s Eleven’ with a backwoods twang

Instead of suave leading men who rob casinos with flair, these mismatched West Virginia misfits turn to crime in the hope of a better life beyond the trailer park. Like cotton candy, the film doesn't linger long in the memory.

Couple’s story captures courage of a French village in World War II

"Love in a Time of Hate" tells the story of the Trocmes and others in Le Chambon who courageously and cleverly put their faith into action to hide Jews.

‘Daughters of Destiny’ shows how to lift India’s ‘untouchables’ one child at a time

This intriguing Netflix documentary on a school only for the lowest of India's caste system enables viewers to encounter people they wouldn't otherwise meet, yet with whose struggle they will surely sympathize.

Be ready to slog through metaphysical hooey of ‘The Dark Tower’

Astute viewers would be wise to spare themselves the necessity of sifting through this pile of New Age nonsense.

‘Annabelle: Creation’ goes for gore, dispenses with rational characters

The film's lapses in reason, believability and even the most rudimentary knowledge of Catholicism may inspire more frowns than frights.

New Smithsonian exhibit explores diversity of religion in early America

The exhibit features artifacts from Christianity, Judaism, Islam and other major world religions. Peter Manseau, the museum's Lilly Endowment curator of American religious history, is the author of several books and curator of the new exhibit.

Compelling study brings archaeology to life for academics, nonexperts

Through rigorous, systematic investigation of the likes of pottery shards, stone tools, post molds and fossilized bones, archaeologists uncover and help us preserve our past.