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  • Known best for her story quilts depicting African American experiences and feminine life, she also created paintings, sculpture and children's books. She was 93.
  • SDSU School of Art & Design welcomes you to “Conjunto,” the MFA Graduate Review Show running October 10 to November 2 in the Flor y Canto and Everett Gee Jackson Galleries at SDSU. Opening reception will be Thursday, October 19 from 4-7 p.m. The show includes 18 artists working in a range of media including woodworking, ceramics, photography, painting, textile art, collage and mixed media. Related links: SDSU Art Galleries website | Instagram
  • Morning Edition spoke to migrants hoping to enter the U.S. and the border agents tasked with keeping them out.
  • California lawmakers are trying to strengthen protections against doxxing — publishing someone’s personal information online with the intent to harm.
  • At least nine Lake Tahoe ski resorts closed and visitors to Yosemite National Park were told to urgently leave Friday as California's most powerful storm of the season bore down on the Sierra Nevada.
  • El presidente Joe Biden develó el martes planes para restringir significativamente los pedidos de asilo en la frontera con México, en momentos en que la Casa Blanca trata de neutralizar la inmigración como tema de controversia de cara a las elecciones de noviembre.
  • "How Green Was My Valley" - A man in his fifties reminisces about his childhood growing up in a Welsh mining village at the turn of the 20th century. Starring: Anna Lee, Donald Crisp, Maureen O'Hara, Roddy McDowall, Walter Pidgeon Stay Updated with Digital Gym Cinema! Facebook | Instagram | X
  • Thieves got away with $30 million in cash from a money storage facility in Los Angeles by breaking into the building on Easter and cracking the safe. Now detectives are seeking to unravel the heist.
  • Nancy Savoca’s star-studded indie gem is a chronicle of a spirited Italian-American New York family that perfectly balances humor, tragedy, and pathos. Joseph Santangelo (Vincent D’Onofrio) is a butcher with a wicked sense of humor who “wins” his wife Catherine (a stellar Tracey Ullman) in a pinochle game. Over the protests of his mother (Judith Malina) who talks to ghosts and makes deals with saints, Joseph marries Catherine. When the old lady dies, her spirit is channeled into her granddaughter Teresa who overtakes the film with her yearning to serve God. Perfectly embodying a modern-day Bernadette, Lili Taylor imbues Teresa with a mix of dedicated innocence and naïveté. Executive produced by Jonathan Demme, with memorable performances from Michael Imperioli, Michael Rispoli and Victor Argo, Household Saints showcases a unique voice in 1990s independent filmmaking. Household Saints has been digitally restored and remastered by Lightbox Film Center at University of the Arts (Philadelphia) in collaboration with Milestone Films with support from Ron and Suzanne Naples. Restoration Supervisor: Ross Lipman, Corpus Fluxus. Picture Restoration: Illuminate Hollywood. Sound Restoration: Audio Mechanics. Special Q&A with filmmaker Nancy Savoca, and producer / co-writer Rich Guay Stay Updated with Digital Gym Cinema! Facebook | Instagram | X
  • The success of Dario Argento’s "The Bird with The Crystal Plumage" ushered in a wave of new, modern takes on the giallo thriller. Some rose above the crowd thanks to skillful execution and stylistic experimentation. Case in point: "The Fifth Cord", which, in the hands of director Luigi Bazzoni (Le Orme, the Possessed), turns a conventional premise into a visually stunning exploration of alienation and isolation. When a man barely survives a brutal assault en route home from a New Year’s party, washed-up, whisky-swilling journalist Franco Nero (DJANGO) is assigned to the case. Before long, the maniac strikes again, this time with fatal results. As the body count rises, Nero is under suspicion himself, making it even more imperative that he crack the case. His only clue: black gloves found at the location of every attack, each with a finger cut off… “Remember that classic scene in "Crystal Plumage" where a victim-to-be ascends a dark staircase, lit only by a flickering candle in her hand? Ever want to see an entire movie shot so beautifully? Thanks to Vittorio Storaro (1900, Apocalypse Now), the same cinematographer, this fascinating giallo has enough visual style to fuel a dozen other thrillers.” — Nathaniel Thompson, Mondo Digital Stay Updated with Digital Gym Cinema! Facebook | Instagram | X
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