All posts tagged: tales

‘Tales of the Gold Monkey’ Star Was 73

‘Tales of the Gold Monkey’ Star Was 73

Caitlin O’Heaney, who starred as the stalked bride to be in the cult slasher film He Knows You’re Alone and as a lounge singer and spy in the Donald P. Bellisario-created adventure series Tales of the Gold Monkey, has died. She was 73. O’Heaney died May 18 in Westchester County in New York, her friend Peter Davis told The Hollywood Reporter. They recently worked together on the short film Faith and Forgiveness. No cause of death was revealed. Trained at Julliard under John Houseman and Michael Kahn, O’Heaney also worked with Katharine Hepburn on Broadway, played a 1930s Hollywood actress for Woody Allen in A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy (1982) and starred as Snow White on the first season of the 1987-88 ABC sitcom The Charmings. The green-eyed, auburn-haired O’Heaney portrayed Amy Jensen, a woman menaced by a bride-obsessed killer, in He Knows You’re Alone (1980), an independent film picked up by MGM. Director Armand Mastroianni said he looked at more than 4,000 photos and interviewed more than 100 actresses before selecting her for the …

Carters’ cries, lullabies and tales of errant crocodiles: Lero Lero and the battle for Sicily’s soul | Folk music

Carters’ cries, lullabies and tales of errant crocodiles: Lero Lero and the battle for Sicily’s soul | Folk music

‘What do I do now that I no longer have my mother?” Lero Lero sing on Com’haiu a Fari, the opening track of their self-titled debut album. “If I still had my mother, I would not love you.” What may sound like the kind of honest self-reckoning a modern songwriter has dragged out of therapy sessions is actually a traditional Sicilian folk text once sung by a washerwoman, reimagined here through three voices modelled on Sicilian Settimana Santa polyphonies. For this Palermo collective, maternal loss is also metaphor: symbolic of Sicily’s ruptured cultural inheritance, which they recover through archival labour songs, carters’ cries and lullabies, then reshape through electronics and microtonal instrumentation. In the Italian imagination, Sicily has long been more than the island at the country’s southern edge. It has functioned as a symbolic South, carrying fantasies of archaic beauty and rural authenticity alongside associations with poverty, criminality and backwardness. Its culture is often romanticised and patronised at once. Alessio Bondí (left) plays his Palermitan guitar with Lero Lero. Photograph: Giulia Parlato Lero Lero’s …

Asghar Farhadi’s ‘Parallel Tales’ Premieres to Polite Ovation

Asghar Farhadi’s ‘Parallel Tales’ Premieres to Polite Ovation

Asghar Farhadi, the Iranian master whose films have twice won the best international feature Oscar (2011’s A Separation and 2016’s The Salesman) and twice won prizes at the Cannes Film Festival (The Salesman and 2021’s A Hero), premiered his latest work, Parallel Tales, at Cannes’ Grand Théâtre Lumière on Thursday night. The French-language drama, which is playing in competition at this year’s fest, was greeted with a five-minute standing ovation — which is, by Cannes standards, polite but not especially enthusiastic. Adapted by Farhadi and his brother, Saeed, from a chapter of Krzysztof Kieślowski’s 10-part project for Polish television, Dekalog (1989-1990), Parallel Tales is a study in voyeurism and the sometimes blurry line between fantasy and reality. It boasts an all-star French cast that includes Isabelle Huppert, Virginia Efira, Vincent Cassel and, in a small role, Catherine Deneuve, all of whom do fine work. But, as The Hollywood Reporter’s chief film critic David Rooney noted in his review, the film becomes a bit meandering and arduous over the course of its two-hour-twenty-minute runtime. And by the …

2006’s ‘Southland Tales’ Imagined an America Gone Off the Deep End. 20 Years Later, We’re Living There

2006’s ‘Southland Tales’ Imagined an America Gone Off the Deep End. 20 Years Later, We’re Living There

It must separate a person a little bit from the normal experience of being human. Absolutely. At the same time, I have met some billionaires. Believe it or not, I have met a few and befriended them. And there are some that are absolutely human, and it’s just an issue of how they compose themselves and what is their worldview. What are they trying to achieve with this money? It’s a really fascinating thing, to think about the responsibilities that come along with that much wealth. Another recent, highly political, extremely current movie that was also a flop at the box office, was Eddington. Did you see that? I loved Eddington. I’m friends with Ari Aster, and I love what he’s doing, the bold risks he’s taking, and I hope he continues down that path, I really do. Eddington ends in a much more cynical fashion than Southland Tales. Yet the cynicism still seems to me to reflect a genuine emotion. And certainly, when Ari has talked about the movie, he’s talked about it coming …

Tales of Love and Loss review – hauntings, tragicomedy and tweezer-sharp wit in Royal Opera triple bill | Opera

Tales of Love and Loss review – hauntings, tragicomedy and tweezer-sharp wit in Royal Opera triple bill | Opera

Tales of Love and Loss: the title made this triple bill of English-language one-acters from the Royal Opera’s Jette Parker Artists sound like something very serious. In fact, it sent us out laughing. Admittedly, after the first work the mood could only lighten. Elizabeth Maconchy’s 1961 two-hander The Departure, last staged in 2007, begins with a woman watching a funeral through her bedroom window; when her husband comes home she realises it is her own death that is being mourned, and that she is there to say farewell. Directed by Talia Stern, in a 1960s set designed by Ana Inés Jabares-Pita, it flirted with melodrama, especially in the flashing-light effects as she remembered the fatal car crash, and the ending, with the sound of a baby crying, felt mawkish. Still, Maconchy’s music, sombre yet lyrically expansive in a way that made it feel like the orchestra was bigger than the 14-strong Britten Sinfonia, made an impressive vocal showcase for the mezzo-soprano Ellen Pearson and baritone Sam Hird. Charlotte Bray’s Making Arrangements, which originated at the …

Stranger Things: Tales from ’85 ending explained – How does the gang survive?

Stranger Things: Tales from ’85 ending explained – How does the gang survive?

**Warning: Major spoilers ahead for Stranger Things: Tales from ’85 episode 10.** Hawkins has officially welcomed us back for animated show Stranger Things: Tales from ’85 seeing the return of Eleven and co, and the arrival of brand new monsters. An all-new voice cast took over to tell the new story, which is set in between seasons 2 and 3, with the gang facing a supernatural threat against Hawkins – and even grappling with the gate to the Upside Down opening once again. Robles recently told Radio Times of the spin-off, which comes just a few months after the end of Stranger Things season 5: “We wanted to focus on kids being kids, riding bikes, solving mysteries with their walkie-talkies and flashlights.” So, as the series drops, here’s everything you need to know about that ending as we wait for any news on a potential season 2. Stranger Things: Tales from ’85 ending explained: What was Daniel’s plan? After the gang realise – a little too late – that Mrs Baxter is not in fact …

Stranger Things: Tales From '85 Gets Mixed Reviews As Critics Weigh In

Stranger Things: Tales From '85 Gets Mixed Reviews As Critics Weigh In

Your favourite Stranger Things characters are back in a new animated spin-off Just months after our last trip to Hawkins, Indiana in the divisive Stranger Things finale, Netflix is taking us right back to where it all started. The animated Stranger Things spin-off Tales From ’85 premiered on the streaming service on Thursday morning, taking inspiration from the Saturday morning cartoons of our youth. Set between the events of the hit show’s second and third seasons, Tales From ’85 introduces a new voice cast as the characters we already know and love, as well as welcoming some new companions and, indeed, monsters to battle. Critics have been having their say in the lead-up to the release, with some hailing it as a return to form for the sci-fi franchise, and others calling it a rather pointless exercise in nostalgia and little else. If you’re not sure about whether to check it out for yourself, here’s a quick run-through of what the reviews for Stranger Things: Tales From ’85 are saying… The Guardian (3/5) “[The series] …

Goblin Market? In This Economy? Five Cautionary Tales About Shopping

Goblin Market? In This Economy? Five Cautionary Tales About Shopping

This content contains affiliate links. When you buy through these links, we may earn an affiliate commission. Get in, reader, we’re going shopping! Even though it was 1862 when Christina Rossetti’s narrative poem Goblin Market was published, its influence still resonates today. In the poem, Laura and Lizzie are very close sisters, but they differ in their feelings toward the local market. One day, Laura purchases fruit from the market, and eating it makes her delirious and delighted. But her sister reminds her about the dangers of the fruit and about a girl who died after eating fruit from the goblin market. The poem has been interpreted in many ways: as a tale of temptation referencing Adam and Eve, an expression of Rossetti’s queer and feminist politics, a warning of the dangers of capitalism or addiction, an exploration of sexuality, and more. Whatever the interpretation, there has been no shortage of “buyer, beware” novels about the dangers of shopping, some literally set in goblin markets. Here are five fun books about such retail adventures. (Retale …

‘Stranger Things: Tales From ’85’ Review: Netflix’s Animated Spinoff

‘Stranger Things: Tales From ’85’ Review: Netflix’s Animated Spinoff

By my count, there are exactly two and a half good reasons to watch Netflix’s animated spinoff, Stranger Things: Tales From ’85. One: You are a child, by which I mean a literal child and not an adult who’s whimsically childlike at heart. You’ve heard good things about Stranger Things, but Mom and Dad have deemed you too young for its TV-14 rating. The slightly mellower Tales From ’85, with its TV-PG rating, could be enough to sate your curiosity for now. Stranger Things: Tales From ’85’ The Bottom Line At least the graphics are prettier. Airdate: Thursday, April 23 (Netflix)Cast: Brooklyn Davey Norstedt, Jolie Hoang-Rappaport, Luca Diaz, Elisha “EJ” Williams as Lucas, Braxton Quinney, Ben Plessala, Brett Gipson, Odessa A’zion, Jeremy Jordan, Janeane GarofaloDeveloped by: Eric Robles, Jennifer Muro, based on Stranger Things, created by Matt Duffer and Ross Duffer Two: You’re a Stranger Things fan who expresses your devotion through fanatical completionism — you will not rest until you’ve consumed every last scrap of footage or word of dialogue this universe has to …