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Review: ‘Curious Incident,' about autism, demonstrates the power of great direction

Review: ‘Curious Incident,' about autism, demonstrates the power of great direction

The hallmark of Susi Damilano direction is joie de vivre. When the producing director of San Francisco Playhouse helms a show, it bursts with delight in the small and ordinary. You picture her encountering a crabby or loathsome character in a script and marveling at how one strand of humanity weaves into the rich texture of our world.
Yet this quality alone does not cover the extent of her skill. Damilano also has the high-flying imagination and the communicative power to make her vision contagious, and all those talents are on splendid display in 'The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time,' which I saw Friday, May 9.
Simon Stephens' adaptation of Mark Haddon's bestselling 2003 novel is about a teenage boy with a condition that's never named but that looks a lot like autism. To realize the world of Christopher (Brendan Looney) as he decides to investigate the gruesome killing of his neighbor's dog, Damilano marshals the full power of theatrical design and straight-play choreography. When the word 'dead' is first pronounced, a whole ensemble positioned about the perimeter gasps. When an overwhelmed Christopher crouches and moans, the ensemble joins him, rocking back and forth.
That superlative cast morphs into not just a flurry of supercilious neighbors, overager classmates and harrumphing strangers but their inanimate surroundings, too. Thanks to the inspired movement direction of Bridgette Loriaux, they're the garish signs and advertisements that overstimulate Christopher's senses. They're the trundling train he tries to take by himself for the first time and the waves his mother (Liz Sklar) dives under at the beach. They're a buzzing electromagnetic field, the furniture in Christopher's household, a space capsule hoisting Christopher above earth's orbit and the Tetris blocks of his favorite video game.
When Wiley Naman Strasser as Christopher's neighbor flings open his door, beady eyes darting, posture coiled as if to protect his drug stash, a whole addled, washout life materializes. When Laura Domingo as a friendlier neighbor dodders and trembles, you see not just her character's dotage but the climate of fear and repression that prevails in their neighborhood.
Actors in larger roles are just as strong. Looney nails the way Christopher has always steamrolled through life at the same pitch, choosing just the right moments as the mystery unfurls to show how his character slowly realizes he doesn't always have to tell the thorough, literal truth at every moment. When his father, Ed (Mark P. Robinson), asks if he's going to behave, Christopher's 'yeah' becomes two syllables, the second trailing off a cliff of unshared plans.
Sophia Alawi, as Christopher's teacher Siobhan, is saddled with much of the show's narration, but she finds ways to make it ferocious as she channels her pupil's voice — the way an adolescent might finally spill innermost thoughts to the stars after clutching them close to the chest.
And the incisive adaptation itself models the art of suggestion. Flights of fancy into outer space say what cannot be said. Seeds of doubt and clues percuss with the precision of a symphony score. Emotional beats tighten, then pluck, your heartstrings as if they knew your deepest yearnings.
The world pegs Christopher — with his inability to read social cues, his tendencies to pee his pants, recoil at touch and bay when he loses control — as the abnormal one. But 'Curious Incident' points out that the very fact that he doesn't make the assumptions most people do makes him a great detective, even as the mystery he's solving expands to cover his whole cosmos. It also demonstrates that everyone in Christopher's life is deeply flawed in their own way, burdening their loved ones, but maybe still worthy of forgiveness for it.
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Netflix just added a gripping sci-fi thriller series with 100% on Rotten Tomatoes — and it's already cracked the top 10
Netflix just added a gripping sci-fi thriller series with 100% on Rotten Tomatoes — and it's already cracked the top 10

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Netflix just added a gripping sci-fi thriller series with 100% on Rotten Tomatoes — and it's already cracked the top 10

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. I've always loved movies and shows that incorporate time travel. As a dedicated thriller fan, I find the narrative hook ripe for shocking twists and highly memorable moments. And 'The Lazarus Project' is more proof that when used well, the narrative device creates practically unmissable TV. This British series originally aired on Sky Max in the summer of 2022 (and TNT in the U.S.), but now has found a new streaming home on Netflix. Subscribers hooked by the elevator pitch of a secret organization altering time to save the world will be pleased to know the streaming service hasn't just added a single season of the show either. Both seasons of "The Lazarus Project" have now landed on the big red streamer. At 16 episodes total, 'The Lazarus Project' is the perfect binge-watch this week. It's one of those rare shows that will have your finger hovering over the 'play next episode' button before the credits have even started rolling. With each new twist and turn, you'll be drawn further into its world of time loops, tricky moral questions and compelling characters. The show is already proving quite a hit on Netflix. Less than 48 hours after its arrival on the platform, and it's found its way into the Netflix top 10 most-watched shows list. It currently ranks No. 5 behind original series like "The Hunting Wives" and "Untamed," but as more subscribers get hooked by its many twists, it could even rise to No. 1. So, if you're on the hunt for your next Netflix binge, 'The Lazarus Project' makes a very compelling case for itself. Here's everything you need to know about this gripping sci-fi thriller series, and why critics were so impressed it managed to pull a rare 100% score on Rotten Tomatoes. What is 'The Lazarus Project' about? George (Paapa Essiedu) might be losing his grip on reality. Waking up on July 1, he lives out an eventful three months that include professional success; marrying his girlfriend, Sarah (Charly Clive); preparing for their first child; and facing a global pandemic. But then he awakens on the morning of July 1, with time having reset back to three months earlier. Stuck in a time loop, reliving the same events over and over again, nobody but George seems to be aware that time is resetting. But he's not going insane. Instead, he's one of a select group of people who can uniquely perceive the flow of time and remember the events of each timeline reset. Invited to join the Lazarus Project, he becomes part of an underground organization that works from the shadows to save the world from universe-ending threats, but the ability to rewrite the past and change the future comes with serious temptations. And George is soon forced to choose between the Lazarus Project's strict rules and saving a loved one. 'The Lazarus Project' reviews — here's why critics rate it 100% On review site Rotten Tomatoes, 'The Lazarus Project' season 1 holds a rare perfect 100% rating. This score comes from a relatively low sample size of 14 reviews, but it still speaks to the sci-fi thriller's quality and the way it managed to grip viewers across its run. 'It's all as fun to watch as it is compelling to consider,' said Judy Berman of TIME Magazine. While Cristina Escobar of praised the series for its 'thoughtful exploration of moral questions' and for packing 'plenty of suspense.' Metro's Sophie Laughton felt the show was 'a watch that's worth the ride,' and Brad Newsome of the Sydney Morning Herald said, 'This intelligent, imaginative sci-fi thriller series sets itself apart with complex, believable characters and dashes of incidental low-key humor.' "Affirming [creator] Joe Barton's status as one of the best screenwriters in the game, The Lazarus Project is exactly the kind of head-spinning, heart-pounding TV that you'll be left wanting to revisit time and again," said Jordan King of Empire Magazine in a four-star review. Dan Einav of the Financial Times was a little more mixed than some critics. 'The opening episode can feel off-puttingly clunky and déjà vu-inducing,' explained Einav. However, he noted that 'In subsequent episodes, thankfully, the eight-parter becomes more intriguing.' The show's second season, which originally debuted in November 2023, doesn't have enough reviews on Rotten Tomatoes for a rating, but the critical takes listed are universally positive. 'This twisty time-loop thriller gets even more dramatic in its second outing. Paapa Essiedu's George is a jittery joy in a smart, sharply scripted show that's lots of fun to watch,' said Leila Latif of the Guardian about 'The Lazarus Project's' second season. Should you stream 'The Lazarus Project' on Netflix? If you're looking for a compelling sci-fi series with intriguing twists and plenty of time-travel shenanigans, then 'The Lazarus Project' isn't just worthy of your watchlist — it should be right at the very top of your streaming pile. It's a compelling thriller that'll hook you instantly. Paapa Essiedu's performance is one of my favorite parts of the show, creating a character in George who is plenty likable, and with some conflicting emotions at play. Yes, he wants to save the world from global catastrophe, but he's got understandable personal desires as well, and these two goals conflict in a way that leads to seriously high-stakes drama. While much of 'The Lazarus Project' is dedicated to intense drama and universe-ending threats, there's just the right amount of humor in the mix. Like when Lazarus Project member Archie (Anjli Mohindra) explains George's abilities to him by describing him as a 'mutant,' but making a point of noting he's "not like Wolverine.' Of course, as a show about time loops and changing the past to alter the future, there is a degree of time travel jargon in 'The Lazarus Project,' and the timeline can get a bit knotty as the show progresses. But these are minor quibbles, and for the most part, 'The Lazarus Project' does a good job of keeping things flowing without the plot spinning out of control. However, before you commit to watching based on all the praise written above, there is one frustrating element I need to warn you about. Sadly, 'The Lazarus Project' was canceled after two seasons, and the season 2 finale ended on a massive cliffhanger — one that looks set to go forever unresolved. So be prepared to be left with lingering questions. This blemish aside, 'The Lazarus Project' is a must-watch series for sci-fi thriller fans, and I'm hoping it's enjoyed a deserved resurgence now that it's arrived on Netflix. In fact, maybe if it manages to make such a large splash on the world's biggest streaming service, then it could be revived for a third season. Or maybe that's just wishful thinking on my part. 'The Lazarus Project' is among the final few major additions to Netflix this month, but the streaming service has already confirmed its slate of new content for August. So, here's a guide to everything new on Netflix in August, if you want to start planning your streaming a little early. Watch "The Lazarus Project" season 1-2 on Netflix now Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button. More from Tom's Guide New on Netflix in August 2025 Netflix's new original looks like a mystery-laced revenge story 5 top new shows to stream this week

For two Palestinian artists, making S.F. theater is resistance
For two Palestinian artists, making S.F. theater is resistance

San Francisco Chronicle​

time4 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

For two Palestinian artists, making S.F. theater is resistance

Hend Ayoub and Hanna Eady's plays might not seem to have much in common. Ayoub's 'Home? A Palestinian Woman's Pursuit of Life, Liberty & Happiness' is an autobiographical solo show about becoming an actor in a world where you're always too Arab, too Israeli or just simply too foreign. Eady and Edward Mast's 'The Return' is a mysterious two-hander set in an auto body shop in which an Israeli Jewish customer keeps peppering a Palestinian mechanic with intrusive questions most of us wouldn't ask strangers. But when two Palestinian Israeli artists make theater in San Francisco in the same month, as mass starvation threatens Gaza, perhaps it's inevitable that commonalities emerge. San Francisco Playhouse's 'Home?' runs through Aug. 16, at Z Below, and Golden Thread Productions and Art2Action Inc.'s 'The Return' begins performances Aug. 7 at the Garret at ACT's Toni Rembe Theater. In advance of both runs, the Chronicle spoke to Ayoub and Eady about their relationship to the news, their homeland and their art. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity. Eady: Where we are in the north, in the Galilee — Gaza is in the south — we could hear the ground rumbling and the air force 24 hours a day in the skies. When they started the war against Iran, a siren would go, and you have to find a bomb shelter. Most people in Palestinian villages don't have bomb shelters, and we'd just sit and say, 'Well, let's hope it's not going to land on my house.' Q: Hend, 'home' is a loaded term for you, since it's the title of your play, but when's the last time you were back in your native Haifa? Ayoub: A few months ago. Actually, I was in shelters as well — not this time, a few months before, when Hezbollah was still in play. Over there, there are apps (where) you get the sirens. You just hear that sound, and you just start running. For me, I felt better being there with my family instead of being here worrying about them. More Information 'Home? A Palestinian Woman's Pursuit of Life, Liberty & Happiness': Written and performed by Hend Ayoub. Directed by Carey Perloff. Through Aug. 16. $40. Z Below, 470 Florida St., S.F. 415-677-9596. 'The Return': Written by Hanna Eady and Edward Mast. Directed by Eady. Performances start Aug. 7. Through Aug. 24. $20-$130. The Garret at ACT's Toni Rembe Theater, 415 Geary St., S.F. 415-626-4061. Ayoub: To me, the news was very different after Oct. 7 happened. In the beginning, I was watching the news and just crying for the Israelis because I was in shock. Like, how could they do this? But then when Gaza happened, and it shifted, and you see the number of deaths, and you're crying for Palestinians in Gaza, but you're not seeing any of it on the news. It explains, I think, why Israelis don't care for the people in Gaza, because they don't see any of the images at all. Eady: I'm going to say the forbidden word: It's a genocide. And if you're not watching it and not seeing the images, it's still faraway land. Even if it's on the news, it's their news. And it might not be true, because they lie. Ayoub: When you're saying (Americans and Israelis) don't see images, they don't get exposed to other stories, other narratives, how are they going to know the other? In Israel, they don't know any Arabs. We don't even mix. Eady: You're back to back. Ayoub: Arabs go to Arab schools. Jews go to Jewish schools. All they see is awful coverage in TV and film, the way we're portrayed as the enemy, the villain, the terrorist. Eady: On Oct. 7, 2023, I was supposed to go to D.C. to work with Ari Roth, (the Jewish artistic director of Voices Festival Productions), on a play that I wrote before Oct. 7, called 'Almonds Blossom in Deir Yassin.' Deir Yassin is the site of the first massacre in 1948. (Roth) called. He said, 'What do you think? Should we do it?' I said, 'There is no better time.' If the war is going to stop us from creating and putting (on) this kind of important work, then we would never do theater. There's always a war. 'Deir Yassin' is a forbidden word to utter, but if we don't, then what? It's a wound that never healed. Q: Do you feel you have certain expectations placed on you as Palestinian artists about what kind of art you're allowed to or supposed to make? Ayoub: We have so many different Palestinians. You have the Palestinians who stayed on the land in 1948 and became Israeli citizens and didn't flee. You have the Palestinians that fled at gunpoint and stayed out when Israel closed the borders. You have Palestinians who you see here in America, the Palestinians who got stuck in Lebanon and Jordan refugee camps and in the West Bank and Gaza. Because we have so many stories and perspectives, some might say, 'Why aren't you writing about what's happening in Gaza and the occupation?' For me, I'm just writing my personal story and my perspective as someone who was born and raised there. Eady: A lot of the stories were not told to us because there's so much shame. It's not a heroic story. We ran away. We didn't put (up) a good fight in 1948. My job, to tell the story, it's an obligation. It's part of who I am. I have to continue to bang at the door until my story is heard. Q: For the Arab characters in your plays, what is home? Eady: (In 'The Return'), for him (an unnamed character played by Nick Musleh) to free himself from the oppressive system and the racism, it's going to require a full expression of who he is. For a long time in the play, he's having a hard time to say, 'I'm a Palestinian.' We grew up brainwashed by the Israeli system to say we're Israelis. The word 'Palestine' was never uttered in my house. Ayoub: It wasn't allowed. Eady: In (my) play, home for him is really (that) first he has to say who he is and then be able to have enough courage, although he's going to be punished, to say 'I'm going home,' and his home (is) most likely a destroyed village. Home is to be able, not that they have to live in Palestine, but to have the right to come. Just like any Jewish American, they have this birthright. Some of them go; some of them don't. They choose. We don't. Ayoub: Home is something that most people, I think, take for granted because they were born in a place where they belong, where they're part of the whole. For us, we don't really belong anywhere. If we're talking specifically about people like us, Palestinian Israelis, home is taken away from you, even if you want to claim it. Even if you want to see yourself as Israeli, you can't, because you're reminded every time that you're not one of us: 'This is the land of the Jews, and you're not Jewish. You're a second-class citizen.' Home is like when you belong, you're embraced, you're welcomed, you don't have to whisper your language in Arabic.

The hottest fashion and art happenings for an endless L.A. summer
The hottest fashion and art happenings for an endless L.A. summer

Los Angeles Times

time2 days ago

  • Los Angeles Times

The hottest fashion and art happenings for an endless L.A. summer

After selling out of their first bag design, the Snap, Eckhaus Latta is re-releasing it in three new colors: Bone, an understated off-white, Forget, a dreamy sky blue, and navy, a classic tone to round out the collection. (The original green and black colors are also restocked.) The rounded leather bag has a worn-in '90s feel, spacious enough for keys, lipsticks and forgotten love letters. The Snap is characterized by functionality, with silver snaps that encircle the strap for a customizable opening. Meant to be worn on the move, the Snap is bound to be a busy Angeleno's best friend. $675. Now available for purchase on Ready for summertime stomping, Venice brand ERL, designed by Eli Russell Linnetz. has launched its first line of flip-flops. The collection features three styles: Low'(1-inch sole, $185), Big (5-inch sole, $375), and the massive Huge (8-inch sole, $1250, made on request). Whether you're towering over surfers in Huge or shuffling along the beach in Low, ERL has created a flip-flop height for any occasion. Available in black and Sand colorways, the flip-flops are designed to blend technical craftsmanship with California understated style. Available on No city has sparked inspiration and myth quite like ours. 'Los Angeles, Revisited' dives into the relationship between L.A. and the artists who've helped shape its structural identity. Tracing back to the city's first skyscraper, the Braly Block completed in 1904, the exhibition reveals how L.A. has grown, been demolished and rebuilt again over decades. Among the greenery of the Huntington, you'll find displays of early Angeleno construction plans and neighborhood renewals that map the city as we know it today. Open through Dec. 1. Byredo is known for its signature mood-setting scents that take users from dry deserts to musky fur-lined lairs. The brand's newest perfume, Alto Astral, is inspired by Brazil's tropical flavor and vibrant cultural expression. The name refers to an elevated state of mind, expressed through creamy top notes of coconut with jasmine petals, incense and a woody base. Available now in Byredo stores and at . Architecture and race are intrinsically linked in architect J. Yolande Daniels' new exhibit, which explores the relationship between structure and discrimination in L.A.'s history. In 'To a Future Space-Time,' Daniels redefines Black architecture as a mode of reclaiming space and autonomy — with the work of Black Angelenos displayed through archival maps, atlases and glossaries in collaboration with the California African American Museum. Running through Sept. 6. L.A. artist Alex Israel is collaborating with Oliver Peoples for a limited edition pair of sunglasses, with all proceeds going to wildfire rebuilding efforts across the city. The brand's classic Oliver Sun frame was redone in three shades — black, tortoise and clear — to reflect a Southern California laid-back attitude. Accompanied by the artist's Fin symbol, representing progress and local surf culture, the frames are at once retro and optimistic for a rebuilt future. Available now. K-Swiss is getting a fresh perspective with Anwar Carrots as creative director of a new line. As the founder of the brand Carrots, the designer has made waves in the industry through his consistent collaborations with everyone from Crocs to 'One Piece.' Inspired by warm, orange-tinted memories of his father rocking K-Swiss in late '90s Orlando, Carrots hopes to bring back an old-school cool to the brand with the collection, K-Swiss Racquet Club. Carrots reworked familiar silhouettes from the heritage brand alongside new iterations from the designer's 'creative garden.' First drop available now. In 1986, California-based norteño band Los Tigres del Norte released the song 'América,' with lyrics conveying that those born on the American continent are brothers. This sentiment is where the exhibit, 'America (Soy Yo!),' finds its place. Curated by gallery director Ever Velasquez, the show features artists from across the U.S., Mexico, Central America, South America and Canada, questioning the man-made borders, land ownership, and criminalization of migration that has defined the political landscape. Open through Aug. 30. Ever wondered what a teapot would look like if it was an octopus? Or a collection of sculpted screws? At Craft in America Center, a family of strange and imaginative teapots are on display in 'Tea for Two: The Teapots of Gloria and Sonny Kamm.' Hand-crafted from a range of materials, including ceramic and pistachio shells, the teapots reinterpret a classic household item with an 'Alice in Wonderland' charm. Tea lovers looking for a drop of whimsy will find it among this display of the world's largest private teapot collection. Open through Aug. 30.

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