By Maria LagorioBoston College's McMullen Museum of Art has long provided students with a colorful window into the greater world of art. Housing an array of artwork and artifacts from the last two centuries taken from around the world, the museum also hosts multiple exhibits per year, showcasing and drawing from vibrant, external collections.
By Christina Lepri
On Friday, Feb. 16, the Korean and Chinese Students Association collaborated on a cultural show, dubbed Rewind to Remind, in an effort to celebrate Korean and Chinese cultures of the past and the present.
Rewind combined traditional and modern dances, musical performances, and martial arts demonstrations; the entire show was pieced together by a series of short skits based off of Fox's 24.
By Stuart Pike / Heights Senior StaffSaturday night the Organization of Latin American Affairs presented their 8th Annual Culture Show at Boston College's Robsham Theatre. And, while it may have lacked the glistening grandeur of some of BC's recent cultural performances, it more than made up for this with its intimate storyline and casual attitude.
By Julianne Smith
By Julianne Smith
For the Heights
On Friday night, two of Boston College's most talented performance groups, My Mother's Fleabag and The Acoustics, joined together in person and name to entertain a packed McGuinn 121. The lecture hall was filled with admiring fans and friends, all highly anticipating the fourth annual "Fleabacoustics" show.
By Joseph Neese / Arts & Review EditorOn the surface, the plot of John Patrick Shanley's Doubt is quite simplistic. It's the perplexing tale of a priest who has been accused of molesting an eighth-grader. But underneath this curtain lies a chilling complexity. The wry Sister Aloysisus believes that Father Flynn is abusive.
By Joseph Neese / Arts & Review EditorJohn Patrick Shanley's Doubt is the did-he-or-didn't-he story that surrounds the suspicions that a Catholic school's principal, a nun named Sister Aloysius, has surrounding the special attention that her parish priest, Father Flynn, gives to the school's first male black student.
By Alex Nordenson / Heights Senior StaffIf you've ever glanced at the last couple pages of The Scene (instead of reading the actual articles), you may have noticed a lovely little comic strip called "Girls And Sports." The clever comic explores the twisted, humorous relationship between the two passions of men (i.
By Marc Cubelli
By Marc Cubelli
For the Heights
Few actors are as pleasurable to watch in an action film as Nicolas Cage. With his rumbling voice, shark's grin, and thick, arching brows that suggest an unholy spawn of Jack Nicholson and Wile E. Coyote, he has all the cocksure, devil-may-care attitude of someone who (please pardon the pun) has been to hell and back and cannot wait for another invite.
By James Fagan
Gabor Csupo. Heard of him? No? Perhaps you've heard of some of the actors he's worked with: Tommy Pickles, Ronald McDonald, Duckman, Scooby Doo, or his money maker, Homer Simpson? You can now add to that list a group of real life, blood actors. This animator and producer of Rugrats, The Wild Thornberries, and The Simpsons (dating all the way back to the Tracy Ullman Show) has crossed the bridge to live filmmaking, and it's a commendable journey.
By Joshua Paterno
Now playing on Britney Spears' iPod
Gnarls Barkley - Crazy
Shiner - Kevin Is G0ne
Outkast - Where Are My Panties?
Joe West - Rehab Girl
Prince - Let's Go Crazy
Billy Banks - Bald-Headed Mama
The Pixies - Where Is My Mind?
The Beatles - Help!
Kingston Trio - Tattooed Lady
Britney - You Drive Me Crazy
Woman behind the music
Poor Britney.