CULTURE KLATSCH
A Complete Unknown , the long-awaited Bob Dylan biopic, will be in theatres on December 25.
FILM
may have made a deal with the (antise- mitic) devil. With premieres at the Venice and Toronto film festivals, critics on seve- ral continents are already singing director Brady Corbet’s praises. ( The Guardian compared the movie to the works of Saul Bellow and Bernard Malamud.)
1965. Timothée Chalamet plays Dylan. Also look for cameos from Edward Nor- ton (playing Pete Seeger), Monica Bar- baro (as Joan Baez), and Scoot McNairy (channeling Woody Guthrie).
The Brutalist In theatres December 20
Ari’s Theme Streaming on Telus Originals February 2025
Already pegged as a likely Oscar conten- der, The Brutalist follows a fictional Hun- garian-Jewish architect László Toth (Adrien Brody) and his wife Erzsébet (Felicity Jones) in America after the Second World War. Separated and impoverished after having survived the camps, the couple is eventually reunited, and their fortunes change after László receives the architec- tural commission of a lifetime from a rich, WASPy American—only to realize that he
A Complete Unknown In theatres December 25
An article in Vancouver’s Jewish Indepen- dent inspired this new documentary about Ari Kinarthy, a composer with type-2 spinal muscular atrophy. Directors Nathan Drillot and Jeff Lee Petry were intrigued by the newspaper’s 2020 story about Ari, a then- 30-year-old Jewish composer from Victoria, B.C., who had won composition awards and
The long-awaited Bob Dylan biopic is, after much anticipation, finally upon us. A Complete Unknown tracks the folk legend’s rise to fame as well as his con- troversial switch from acoustic to elect- ric guitar at the Newport Folk Festival in
60
Made with FlippingBook Digital Proposal Creator