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  • Embeth Davidtz’s film “Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight” is powered by a 7-year-old’s powerful performance, Dan Webster says.
  • “The Life of Chuck” is a meditation on this experience we call life, and how our memories give it meaning, Dan Webster says.
  • Wes Anderson imbues his film “The Phoenician Scheme” with all the familiar, artistic trappings of his idiosyncratic style, Dan Webster says.
  • Ari Aster’s violent comedy "Eddington" has only been out for a week and it’s already the most divisive film of the year. Nathan Weinbender says it’s got a lot of ideas but doesn’t add up to much.
  • Spokane Symphony Music Director James Lowe and Symphony Chorale Director Meg Stohlmann discuss many aspects of choral music with host Jim Tevenan
  • Julianne Moore plays a desperate mother and Sydney Sweeney is her troubled daughter in the neo-noir “Echo Valley.” Nathan Weinbender says the film, streaming on Apple TV+, is a well-made diversion that could have been a lot more.
  • Aimee Brooks reads an original poem from "Spokane Campfire Stories"
  • Eva Murphy reads an original poem from "Spokane Campfire Stories"
  • Comedies can be hard to review. Either you laugh or you don’t. Nathan Weinbender says you’ll either roar with laughter or sit stone-faced during “Friendship,” starring Tim Robinson and Paul Rudd.
  • On this week’s show, Dan Webster, Mary Pat Treuthart and Nathan Weinbender discuss Spike Lee’s newest film “Highest 2 Lowest,” which is his version of Ed McBain’s 1959 novel “King’s Ransom,” as well as take a look back at another McBain adaptation, Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa’s 1963 film “High and Low.”
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