Feature Story

Winnipeg Folk Fest Interview & Performance: Two Crows for Comfort

Posted by: Paul Little  •  December 22, 2025 @ 1:43pm

Two Crows for Comfort are a Manitoba folk duo (with roots and country leanings) who spend a good chunk of their year touring around North America with their dog in tow. The incredible harmonies and storytelling from this real-life couple are up there with some of the best duos making their style of music anywhere on the planet.

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Review: About Schmidt

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  December 20, 2002 @ 11:59am

Jack's back, let the elderly Oscar-voters cheer. "Oh my god! Jack's made a new movie. He so deserves the Oscar," you hear as a gaggle of Beverly Hills, wheelchair bound Oscar-voters say as they scurry past.

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Review: 25th Hour, The

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  December 19, 2002 @ 11:59am

Controversial director Spike Lee serves up his latest project since the fall of the World Trade Center in New York City.

25th Hour follows Montgomery Brogan (Edward Norton), Hermes Jewelry an Irish drug dealer who finds himself left with one day of freedom before he is sent to the "big house" for seven years.

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Review: Analyze That

Posted by: Tom Milroy  •  December 6, 2002 @ 11:59am

1999's Analyze This did well at the box office, but it wasn't all that funny. Here we are three years later, and the sequel should also do well at the box office plus it's a lot funnier.

Analyze That features the same cast: Robert De Niro, Billy Crystal, and Lisa Kudrow, looking and acting like Teri Garr (and that's a very good thing).

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Review: Analyze That

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  December 6, 2002 @ 11:59am

In 1999, a little mob-comedy called Analyze This spawned a new look at mob bosses, their crew, and the life behind the scenes. Hot on the heels of the new HBO mafia-series The Sopranos, Analyze This paved new territory and gave comedian Billy Crystal his first hit since 1994's City Slickers 2.

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Review: 8 Mile

Posted by: J.S. Lee  •  November 8, 2002 @ 11:59am

After months of waiting in the wings for just the right moment to drop, the much anticipated (and much delayed) motion picture debut of controversial mega-star rapper, Eminem, finally makes its way into movie theaters this weekend. 8 Mile, directed by Academy Award-winner Curtis Hanson (Wonder Boys, L.A.

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The ultimate Experiment: Hirschbiegel shows brutality of humankind

Posted by: Jeremy Maron  •  November 1, 2002 @ 1:21am

As a blackjack dealer, I can honestly tell you that the majority of the time, gambling does not pay. For every person that leaves my table up, 10-15 will leave down, and the person that left up will most likely lose his/her winnings the next day.

That being said, occasionally a gamble does pay off big time, and changes your life forever.

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Review: jackass: the movie

Posted by: Jeremy Maron  •  October 25, 2002 @ 2:12am

I was completely unsurprised that in the theatre where jackass: the movie (hereafter referred to as jackass) was shown, it reeked of weed. Maybe I'm getting old, maybe I'm a film snob, or maybe jackass is just stupid.

The movie is just like jackass the television show, which thank God I've never seen a complete episode of.

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Review: Abandon

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  October 18, 2002 @ 11:59am

Abandon is a university campus thriller that follows the exploits of one Katie Burke (Katie Holmes) who is devotedly pushing her way through her financial thesis. Her thesis is her life and anything that seems to interfere with it drives Katie to the point of paranoia.

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30-Second Review: Abandon

Posted by: Aaron Merke  •  October 18, 2002 @ 12:00am

Katie Holmes and the guy from Law and Order (Benjamin Bratt).

Girl's rich, bohemian boyfriend (Charlie Hunnam) is lost. Is he dead?

We will find out. Probably by the end of the movie.

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Review: The Bourne Identity

Posted by: Dean Kish  •  June 14, 2002 @ 11:59am

Spies, intrigue, amnesia and exotic European locales are the elements that make up the new spy thriller, The Bourne Identity. Matt Damon returns to lush locales he visited in The Talented Mr. Ripley to take a crack at the evolving Hollywood spy genre.

Matt Damon stars as author Robert Ludlum's super-spy Jason Bourne.

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