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BERKELEY'S NEWS • MARCH 21, 2023

Welcome to the (March) Madness! Read more here

Emma Murphree

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Film beats Joy Diamond and Emma Murphree are here to round up some streaming gems — and a couple of duds too.
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Film beats Joy Diamond and Emma Murphree are here to round up some streaming gems — and a couple of duds too.
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The film positions its only point of intrigue as its lesbian romance, an insufficient measure given its lack of depth and inchoate narratives.
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The film positions its only point of intrigue as its lesbian romance, an insufficient measure given its lack of depth and inchoate narratives.
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There is no dearth of ambition in Robert Eggers’ third feature, which forsakes arid Viking drudgery — the kind mired in the myriad folktales “The Northman” sources from — for orgiastic, chainmail-clad antics.
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There is no dearth of ambition in Robert Eggers’ third feature, which forsakes arid Viking drudgery — the kind mired in the myriad folktales “The Northman” sources from — for orgiastic, chainmail-clad antics.
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Fractals of sticky-sweet Americana fade in and out of Chloë and the Next 20th Century, the fifth LP from Josh Tillman, performing as Father John Misty.
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Fractals of sticky-sweet Americana fade in and out of Chloë and the Next 20th Century, the fifth LP from Josh Tillman, performing as Father John Misty.
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Whether or not you got the chance to catch these movies in theaters or from your couch, film beats Joy Diamond and Emma Murphree are here with four more March releases available to scope out.
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Whether or not you got the chance to catch these movies in theaters or from your couch, film beats Joy Diamond and Emma Murphree are here with four more March releases available to scope out.
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“Everything Everywhere All At Once” is a film as overflowing as its title connotes. It's a wily multiverse odyssey that packs a punch; yet, it also unfolds like a set of nesting dolls, where each layer inches closer to a shared spiritual core.
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“Everything Everywhere All At Once” is a film as overflowing as its title connotes. It's a wily multiverse odyssey that packs a punch; yet, it also unfolds like a set of nesting dolls, where each layer inches closer to a shared spiritual core.
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What is precisely horrifying about the provincial is, at times, lost on director Goran Stolevski, whose debut feature “You Won’t Be Alone” stumbles upstream, maladroit in its kicking up of gravel, dirt and whatever other detritus lurks beneath the surface. 
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What is precisely horrifying about the provincial is, at times, lost on director Goran Stolevski, whose debut feature “You Won’t Be Alone” stumbles upstream, maladroit in its kicking up of gravel, dirt and whatever other detritus lurks beneath the surface. 
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Onstage, Hadreas’ discography blooms. At times, what audiences experienced was more akin to performance art than a concert.
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Onstage, Hadreas’ discography blooms. At times, what audiences experienced was more akin to performance art than a concert.
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For all of its A24 marketing-ready garnishes, the film paradoxically gets back to basics.
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For all of its A24 marketing-ready garnishes, the film paradoxically gets back to basics.
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“The Outfit” is at its best when it interrogates moral ambiguities or, at the very least, provides a cheap thrill in the form of an undulating plot that induces bated breath. Regrettably, it is wont to lose sight of both.
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“The Outfit” is at its best when it interrogates moral ambiguities or, at the very least, provides a cheap thrill in the form of an undulating plot that induces bated breath. Regrettably, it is wont to lose sight of both.
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