Sentimental ‘All of Us Strangers’ tries too hard
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 22:33:23 GMT
How is it that “All of Us Strangers,” this strange little gay fable from “The Twilight Zone,” is on the receiving end of such rapturous reviews from some critics, many of them on the festival circuit? It may be because the film co-stars Irish actor and critics’ darling Paul Mescal (“Aftersun”), who is currently filming “Gladiator 2,”and features an admittedly wrenching performance from Irishman Andrew Scott, perhaps best known as Professor Moriarty in that almost-good Benedict Cumberbatch “Sherlock” series and as “Fleabag”’s “hot priest.”Directed and co-written by Andrew Haigh (“45 Years”) based on the 1988 novel “Strangers” by Japanese author Taichi Yamada, the film is an odd bird. Haigh added the gay element. Scott is Adam, a single gay screenwriter who never gets past a few opening words of his latest screenplay. He is interrupted by a knock at the door. It is Harry, (Mescal), a handsome gay neighbor with a bottle of Scotch and a flirtatious manner. Will Adam invite s...‘Memory’ romance a showcase for stellar cast
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 22:33:23 GMT
“Memory” is a romance about two severely damaged people who find one another and fall in love in Brooklyn. Sylvia (Academy Award winner Jessica Chastain) is an adult care-worker from a family with money. She lives in a semi-shabby, carefully locked and alarm-equipped apartment near an elevated subway with her 13-year-old daughter Anna (Brooke Timber), who she walks to school every day. Sylvia will not allow Anna to attend parties with older boys.One evening, Sylvia attends a high school reunion and a strange man sits beside her. His name is Saul Shapiro (Peter Sarsgaard), and he follows her home and stands outside Sylvia’s apartment in the rain. This may remind some viewers of the lover who dies after standing outside his beloved’s window in the rain in James Joyce’s short story “The Dead.” Sylvia’s calls the man’s contact number, his brother Isaac (Josh Charles), who lives in a townhouse with his daughter and Saul. Sylvia, an AA member who has been sob...Dear Abby: It’s time to cut the apron strings, mom
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 22:33:23 GMT
Dear Abby: My husband and I moved near the ocean last year. I have two sons, 21 and 17. My older son moved across the country with some friends. The younger son, “Cody,” chose at the last minute to stay with his dad.Abby, it has been awful. Cody dropped out of high school and did not keep up with his home-school work. He quit his jobs, and he’s on depression medication. This week, both boys moved where I am. My house is small, so I got them an apartment in my name. The landlord thinks I’m going to be living there.My question is, how often should I go there and clean, make dinner and visit? I feel like I’ll want to be there all the time — before work, after work and on weekends. My husband thinks I should back off, but Cody is only 17 and going through a lot.They moved into the apartment today, so this is still new. Also, is it crazy that I paid to put them in their own apartment? I felt like it was an OK choice since our house is so small. They bo...Baltimore celebrates historic 20% drop in homicides even as gun violence remains high
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 22:33:23 GMT
BALTIMORE (AP) — Long plagued by rampant gun violence, Baltimore recorded less than 300 homicides last year for the first time in nearly a decade, ending a surge that began in 2015 following the death of Freddie Gray, which sparked civil unrest and prompted widespread calls for police reform.The 20% annual decrease, which city leaders called the largest ever, suggests Baltimore’s ongoing anti-violence efforts are working.“We’re finally seeing those efforts paying off and saving lives,” Mayor Brandon Scott said at a news conference earlier this week.To some extent, Baltimore’s 2023 data is reflected nationwide as many cities have reported declines over the past several months following a pandemic peak. But to Baltimoreans whose loved ones were among the 263 people killed last year in the city, the positive trend is bittersweet. Dozens of mourners gathered outside City Hall for a candlelight vigil Wednesday night where elected officials and community leaders read aloud the victims’ na...Police officer convicted of killing a Colorado man is set to learn if he will spend time behind bars
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 22:33:23 GMT
DENVER (AP) — A Colorado police officer convicted of killing Elijah McClain, a young Black man walking home from a store, is expected to learn Friday whether a judge will sentence him to prison or he will receive probation. McClain’s mother also may speak at the sentencing hearing.Among the three officers charged in McClain’s 2019 death, Randy Roedema was the only one found guilty and was the most senior officer who initially responded to the scene. A jury convicted the former Aurora officer in October of criminally negligent homicide, which is a felony, and third-degree assault, which is a misdemeanor. McClain’s killing received little attention at the time, but gained renewed interest the following year as mass protests swept the nation after the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police. McClain’s death became a rallying cry for critics of racial injustice in policing. In a separate trial, two paramedics were recently convicted for injecting 23-year-old McClain wit...Teen kills 6th grader, wounds 5 others and takes own life in Iowa high school shooting, police say
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 22:33:23 GMT
PERRY, Iowa (AP) — A teen armed with a shotgun and a handgun unleashed terror at an Iowa high school on the first day of classes in the new year, authorities said, killing a sixth grader and wounding five others as people hunkered down in classrooms, barricaded offices and fled the barrage of bullets. The suspect, a 17-year-old student at the school in Perry, died of what investigators believe was a self-inflicted gunshot wound, an Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation official said. An administrator, later identified by his alma mater as Perry High School Principal Dan Marburger, was among the five wounded Thursday as students returned from winter break. Authorities identified the shooter as Dylan Butler, 17, but provided no information about a possible motive. Two friends and their mother who spoke with The Associated Press said Butler was a quiet person who had been bullied for years.Authorities said Butler had a pump-action shotgun and a small-caliber handgun. Mitch Mortvedt, ...California hires guards to monitor businessman’s other sites under I-10 after freeway fire
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 22:33:23 GMT
LOS ANGELES (AP) — More than a month after an arson fire at a storage yard damaged a key Los Angeles freeway, the state has hired security guards to watch out for smoke and other trouble at three additional sites beneath Interstate 10 that were leased to the same bankrupt businessman.Associated Press journalists visited the properties and saw wooden pallets and other hazardous and flammable material much like what fed the Nov. 11 inferno under the freeway, which is used by 300,000 vehicles daily. Rats scurried beneath cars, trucks and RVs in various states of repair as electrical wiring snaked across the ground.The state has subcontracted the security services as it fights to evict Ahmad Anthony Nowaid and scores of tenants subleasing through him in violation of his contracts with the California Department of Transportation (or Caltrans), according to court records.They are due back in court this month.No arrests have been announced in the arson case that forced a one-week closure o...Capitol riot, 3 years later: Hundreds of convictions, yet 1 major mystery is unsolved
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 22:33:23 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — Members of far-right extremist groups. Former police officers. An Olympic gold medalist swimmer. And active duty U.S. Marines. They are among the hundreds of people who have been convicted in the massive prosecution of the Jan 6, 2021, riot in the three years since the stunned nation watched the U.S. Capitol attack unfold on live TV. Washington’s federal courthouse remains flooded with trials, guilty plea hearings and sentencings stemming from what has become the largest criminal investigation in American history. And the hunt for suspects is far from over. “We can not replace votes and deliberation with violence and intimidation,” Matthew Graves, the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, told reporters on Thursday. Authorities are still working to identify more than 80 people wanted for acts of violence at the Capitol. And they continue to regularly make new arrests, even as some Jan. 6 defendants are being released from prison after completing their s...Families in Gaza search desperately for food and water, wait in long lines for aid
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 22:33:23 GMT
MUWASI, Gaza Strip (AP) — Stranded in a corner of southern Gaza, members of the Abu Jarad family are clinging to a strict survival routine.They fled their comfortable three-bedroom home in northern Gaza after the Israel-Hamas war broke out nearly three months ago. The 10-person family now squeezes into a 16-square meter (172-square foot) tent on a garbage-strewn sandy plot, part of a sprawling encampment of displaced Palestinians.Every family member is assigned daily tasks, from collecting twigs to build a fire for cooking, to scouring the city’s markets for vegetables. But their best efforts can’t mask their desperation.At night “dogs are hovering over the tents,” said Awatif Abu Jarad, an older member of the family. “We are living like dogs!”Palestinians seeking refuge in southern Gaza say every day has become a struggle to find food, water, medicine and working bathrooms. All the while, they live in fear of Israeli airstrikes and the growing threat of illnesses.Israel’s bombardme...Jobs report for December will likely conclude another solid year of hiring in 2023
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 22:33:23 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — Bringing resurgent inflation down was never expected to be so relatively pain-free.Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warned of hard times ahead after the Fed began jacking up interest rates in the spring of 2022 to attack high inflation. Economists predicted that the much higher borrowing costs that resulted would cause a recession, with layoffs and rising unemployment, in 2023.Yet the recession never arrived, and none appears to be on the horizon. The nation’s labor market, though cooler than in the sizzling-hot years of 2022 and 2023, is still cranking out enough jobs to keep the unemployment rate near historic lows.The trend toward slower, but still healthy, hiring likely continued in December. The Labor Department is expected to report Friday that employers added a still-solid 160,000 jobs last month, according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm FactSet. That would mean that the economy had added 2.7 million jobs in 2023 — an average of 226,000...Latest news
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