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11 Films Where Vancouver Is Basically Its Own Character
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Where the cast of Clueless is now - legal trouble, tragic death, ditching fame
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July 4 Celebrate US fireworks launching from Carter Mountain benefits Ronald McDonald House
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Graphic: James Bareham/Polygon | Source image: Universal Pictures
Believe it or not, the Josie and the Pussycats movie turned 20 years old in 2021. In the two decades since the release of the Archie Comics adaptation starring Rachel Leigh Cook, Rosario Dawson, and Tara Reid, the movie has gone from belittled box-office flop to cult classic and critical darling.
Why did a movie that hardly anyone saw in theaters become a generational touchstone for millions? Simple: Because it’s a movie about socialism. Yes,
Josie and the Pussycats is technically also a movie about an all-female rock band caught up in a world-domination plot involving Parker Posey brainwashing millions of teenagers with pop music, but it’s also about three women who live together, share everything, and reject ego. If this isn’t AOC’s favorite movie of all time, I’m not sure what is! (OK, it might be
The PRC pops up at CambridgeSide
By Mark Feeney Globe Staff,Updated May 5, 2021, 1:28 p.m.
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Bruce Myren, Black Lives Matter, Robert Frost Trail, 2020Bruce Myren/courtesy Gallery Kayafas
CAMBRIDGE â Thereâs a rather marvelous photograph of Ansel Adams at work. Taken by Cedric Wright, in 1942, it shows Adams standing with his tripod and camera on a specially made platform atop a Ford station wagon. The wagon is a classic âwoodie.â Visible in the background is Yosemiteâs Half Dome.
Itâs a reminder that even Adams, the most famous photographic presenter of nature at its most pristine, was an emissary from the manmade world. Or as the curator John Szarkowski once wrote, âAdams was happiest in the high mountains, where he lived, for a while, on tinned hash, bourbon whiskey, and visions.â Only one of those three items naturally occurs in the great outdoors.