Robert Eggers’s take expands significantly on the 1922 classic—and makes a pivotal change, with sickening implications.
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Author: The New Yorker
The Year the Metropolitan Opera Declared War on the Critics
Peter Gelb thinks “experimental” music leads to dwindling audiences, but performances around the country suggest otherwise.
Kyle Abraham’s Extraordinary Dance Memoir
In “Dear Lord, Make Me Beautiful,” Abraham offers a deeply personal portrait of his depressed inner state, set against the splendor of the world around him.
“Black Doves” Offers a Sentimental Spin on the Spy Genre
The Keira Knightley- and Ben Whishaw-led Netflix series eventually snares its protagonists in a traditional espionage plot—but it’s most interested in their friendship.
He’s Making a List, and Checking It Twice
He may also run it through ChatGPT, just to polish it up.
Diana Ejaita’s “Midnight Moments”
The magical blur of New Year’s Eve.
What Spotify Is Really Costing Us
The history of recorded music is now at our fingertips. But the streamer’s algorithmic skill at giving us what we like may keep us from what we’ll love.
Briefly Noted Book Reviews
“Giant Love,” “Anima,” “Playworld,” and “Havoc.”
Does Morality Do Us Any Good?
Our basic sense of right and wrong appears to be the product of blind evolution. The hard question is how unsettling that should be.
For Isabella Rossellini, Acting Goes Beyond Words
The actress is touring a one-woman show about how animals express themselves. She’s also getting Oscar buzz for “Conclave,” a film in which she hardly speaks.
Food Review: The Best Restaurant Dishes of 2024
A food critic’s favorite menu items from a year of dining out.
Audra McDonald Triumphs in “Gypsy” on Broadway
In the latest revival of Arthur Laurents, Stephen Sondheim, and Jule Styne’s iconic musical, George C. Wolfe humanizes a famously monstrous stage mother.
“Babygirl” Never Really Makes a Mess
The relationship at the heart of a new erotic thriller, starring Nicole Kidman, doesn’t explode power struggles; it exists within them.
The Best Theatre of 2024
This year’s standout productions ran the gamut from outrageously fabulous to quasi-religious in feeling.
“The Brutalist” ’s Epic Inversion of the American Dream
In his latest film, the director Brady Corbet depicts the fate of a brilliant Hungarian architect, who lands in the United States after surviving Buchenwald.
How Judith Jamison Shaped Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre
Also: A private-school meltdown in “Eureka Day,” jam rock comes to town, Richard Brody reviews “Babygirl” and “A Complete Unknown,” and more.
“A Complete Unknown” Shears Off Vital Details in the Life of a Colossal, Complicated Artist
Timothée Chalamet’s performance is a remarkable act of mimicry that reveals little of the real Bob Dylan.
The Remarkable Collapse of Iran’s Powerful Alliances
The Islamic Republic is weaker—on multiple fronts—than it’s been in nearly half a century.
The Afterimage of Arlene Croce
With her writing for The New Yorker, Croce put dance criticism and dance itself on the cultural map.
Critics at Large Live: The Year of the Flop
Across culture and politics, 2024 was a year of great expectations followed by disastrous misses. What space might these upsets open up in their wake?
The “Nickel Boys” Director RaMell Ross on Making the Most Haunting Scene
The Oscar-nominated filmmaker discusses finding the proper perspective for depicting the characters of his latest film adaptation.
Luca Guadagnino’s Fascination with the Bourgeoisie
The “Challengers” and “Queer” director discusses some books about his longtime preoccupation: the codes and customs of the rich.
The Best Films of 2024
The year’s strongest films offered thrilling affirmation of cinema as a global medium.
The Artist Exposing the Data We Leave Online
With projects like “IMG_0001,” an online compendium of YouTube home videos, Riley Walz is calling attention to the hidden deposits of personal information that power our digital lives.
How Dare Celebrities Cheat?
Our parasocial dismay has become confused with social critique.
Why Can’t You Pack a Bag?
Our overstuffed suitcases burden us more than we realize.
Food Review: Three Exceptional Panettones
When it comes to the Italian holiday loaf, there’s magnificence and there’s stultifying disappointment, with little in between.
The Best Pop Songs of 2024
The year’s breakthrough music moments included a Taylor Swift comeback, an unexpected Internet-rap collab, and an absurdist sample of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.”
A Scathing Family Drama by Leslye Headland Comes to Broadway
Two scathing new productions satisfy our hunger for dysfunction-driven entertainment.
The Best TV Shows of 2024
In an otherwise bleak year for television, a few truly great entries shone all the more brightly.
The Berlin Philharmonic Doesn’t Need a Star Conductor
The musicians possess a powerful collective personality, creating an organic mass of sound.
Restaurant Review: Borgo Is Worth the Trip to Manhattan
Andrew Tarlow is known for Brooklyn spots with low lighting, tattooed servers, and hunks of meat. Now, across the East River for the first time, he shifts the vibe toward stately elegance.
A Photographer’s Intimate Chronicle of Home Birth
Maggie Shannon’s black-and-white images of childbirth in the COVID era capture the awe-inspiring, quotidian experience of turning one person into two.
The Best Albums of 2024
It’s possible that I listened to more music this year than any other. I lost interest in podcasts. I lost interest in silence. There was too much extraordinary work out there.
The Meditative Organ Soundscapes of Kali Malone
The eighty-minute suite “All Life Long” is slow, hushed, and gnawingly beautiful, but it does not supply conventional musical comforts.
Houston’s Thriving West African Food Scene
As the city has welcomed more immigrants from Nigeria and neighboring countries, the local restaurant landscape has flourished.
A Lakota Playwright’s Take on Thanksgiving
“The Thanksgiving Play” is a comedy on an awkward subject, and a sendup of liberal good intentions. The staff writer Vinson Cunningham speaks with the playwright Larissa FastHorse.
The Amazing, Disappearing Johnny Carson
Carson pioneered a new style of late-night hosting—relaxed, improvisatory, risk-averse, and inscrutable.
“Disclaimer” Is a Baffling Misfire from a Great Auteur
Alfonso Cuarón’s foray into television is a work of such vacuity that even Cate Blanchett can’t salvage it.
Ryan Murphy’s Latest Era of Cynical Hits
In “Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story,” the astoundingly prolific showrunner melds his modes as provocateur and clumsy social-justice warrior, with mixed results.