Title: U-Daily News - Today's Entertainment
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TV
"CSI: New York"
Logline: "Someone out there's missing a wife," grimly rasps taut-jawed detective Mac Taylor (Gary Sinise), who himself lost his wife, on Sept. 11 (fast becoming TV's favorite back-story for characters), and whose insomnia only further drives his investigative fervor. In tonight's premiere, he and his team (including "Providence's" Melina Kanakaredes as his partner, Stella Bonasera) search for a typically twisted killer seeking to perfect his method of neurologically trapping women in their own bodies....[MORE]

"Lost"
Logline: "Gilligan's Island" with a grisly twist: Human hors d'oeuvres instead of coconut cream pies. After a plane crashes on a remote Pacific island, man-of-action Jack (Matthew Fox) and fairly strong-sort-of-silent-type Kate (Evangeline Lilly) must oversee a band of panicky, ineffectual wimps and help them survive. Oh, and there's some sort of unseen monster lurking in the jungle, anxious to thin out the sizable cast....[MORE]

• "The Mountain"
• "Veronica Mars"
• Cuban is Trumped in reality duel
• CBS producer on thin ice after guard story

STAGE
Shalt thou make a killing?
It's a big-budget musical spectacle based on a biblical tale. It contains dialogue that's sung throughout the performance, making the entire effort more like opera than Broadway, and it's having its American premiere in Los Angeles.

Talk about your potential financial "thou shalt not ... "

No, a stage version of "The Ten Commandments' won't be an easy sell, even with a glut of promotion and movie star Val Kilmer's bearded face peering out from billboards and the sides of buses across the city....[MORE]

• Joel, Tharp pack a winning punch
• Twyla Tharp challenges dancers and audiences alike with 'Movin' Out'
• It's 19th century fireworks for Pacific Symphony

Theater Reviews | MORE IN STAGE >>

On DVD / Video
Under the hood with 'Star Wars'
You get the feeling that George Lucas is like his hot-rodder John in "American Graffiti" - always souping up his engine, looking for a little edge.

With the release for the first time on DVD of the "Star Wars Trilogy" - the first films in the series, which we all know are parts IV, V and VI - comes more tinkering. This after the 1997 re-release of the remastered films, which had some new scenes added. The latest tinkering is very minor (so keep your eyes open), but the films themselves - again remastered - look eye-popping and sound spectacular....[MORE]

• September 17 releases
• 'Star Wars' debuts on DVD

MORE IN ON DVD / VIDEO >>

FILM
Gorgeous 'Sky' has limits
Dazzling to watch, difficult to give in to, "Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow" uses newfangled technology in the service of old-fashioned Saturday-morning serials with decidedly mixed results. The movie has no sets, no locations, just actors against blue screen, with more than 2,000 effects shots simulating the fantastic worlds around them. The sepia-toned fruits of this ambitious labor sometimes feel like "Flash Gordon" by way of Guy Maddin - visually arresting, but also chilly and off-putting....[MORE]

• 'Mr. 3000' bats about .300
• 'Ghost in the Shell' a bit cracked

Features | Reviews | On DVD / Video | Video Games | FILM

MUSIC
New CD's this week
Green Day, "American Idiot' — The Berkeley punk trio breaks from the norm to create a 21-song punk rock opera. While never becoming overtly partisan, the group weighs in on our nation's current administration while stretching the boundaries of what a mainstream album should sound like....[MORE]

• U.K. singer Polly Paulusma cutting through on radio, in concert with 'Scissors'
• It's 19th century fireworks for Pacific Symphony

CD Reviews | Music News | MORE IN MUSIC >>

Books
A new picture of Iran
For someone who didn't grow up with comic books, Marjane Satrapi has proven a quick learn. Satrapi, who has followed up her best-selling, critically acclaimed "Persepolis" with "Persepolis 2: The Story of a Return" (Pantheon; $17.95), has essayed her youth in Iran - and, in her latest book, her years of rudderless rebellion in Vienna, followed by a return to an Iran that, despite the end of a revolution and a war against Iraq, is no less oppressive - with two graphic novels that are by turns chilling, heartbreaking and caustically funny....[MORE]

• Book paints picture of Jimmy Hoffa's demise
• 'Supernumerary' describes life aboard a container ship

Books

   

Information
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