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ARTS TIMES COLONIST B3 SUNDAY, MARCH 9, 2008 JOSEPH BLAKE Times Colonist BRAD TURNER QUARTET Small Wonder (Maximum Jazz) Jazz renaissance man Brad Turner sticks to trumpet and flugelhorn on this recently released CD. He’s ably backed by his Vancouver-based trio of pianist Bruno Hubert, bassist André Lachance and drummer Dylan Van der Schyff on a repertoire of eight of Turner’s evocative originals. Crisply recorded at CBC Stu- dio 2 in Vancouver, the session showcases Turner’s flawless technique and boundless imag- ination on a varied collection of tightly wound tunes driven by the leader’s excellent backing band. They’ve been together for 14 years, and you can hear it on every track. Lachance and Van der Schyff’s loping rhythmic propulsion is pushed along by Hubert’s thoughtful keyboard accents, while Turner burns an intense narrative through his tune’s playful changes. NORDIC CONNECT Flurry (ArtistShare) Nanaimo-bred sisters Ingrid and Christine Jensen team-up with Swedish pianist Maggi Olin, Swedish bassist Mattias Welin and Ingrid’s husband, Jon Wikan on drums to produce this beau- tiful collection of richly textured modern jazz. From the opening reading of Olin’s title track and throughout a repertoire of nine original compositions, the quintet plays intuitive, expressive jazz. Chris- tine and Ingrid wrote most of the tunes and share tart, bitter- sweet dual lines in front of the rhythm section’s softly throb- bing foundation, Ingrid dou- bling on trumpet and flugelhorn and Christine on alto and soprano sax. It’s a warm, under- stated, emotionally powerful offering. MILES DAVIS The Essential Miles Davis (Columbia Legacy) This two-CD set surveys Miles Davis’ many-faceted career from his teenage breakthrough with Charlie Parker in 1945 to his late-season collaboration with multi-instrumentalist Marcus Miller and Miles’ muted trum- pet brilliance on 1986’s Portia. The 23 performances capture Davis’ mercurial changes with selections from Birth of the Cool, hard-bop jams on Prestige, col- laborations with John Coltrane and the modal triumph of So What, the orchestral brilliance of his work with Gil Evans, and several examples of arguably his best band featuring Herbie Han- cock, Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams. Disc two shines a light on several of Davis’ overlooked electronic masterpieces includ- ing cuts from Bitches Brew, Live Evil, On the Corner, We Want Miles, You’re Under Arrest, and Tutu. The scope of the musician’s lifetime achievements is breath- taking. If you could only have one Miles Davis CD, this would be the one. TERRENCE BLANCHARD A Tale of God’s Will (a requiem for katrina) New Orleans-bred trumpet star Terrence Blanchard has pro- duced most of the evocative music for Spike Lee’s movies. This recording grew out of Blan- chard’s work on Lee’s recent documentary, When the Levees Broke, and it has a sumptuous, cinematic scope. Blanchard conducts the Northwest Sinfonia on several cuts, framing his soulful horn and fine, young band’s offerings with added grace. It’s simply gorgeous, heartbreakingly beau- tiful music. Drummer Kendrick Scott, bassist Derrick Hodge, saxo- phonist Bruce Winston, and pianist Aaron Parks add their compositions to the bandleader’s song cycle of original work, pro- ducing a sonic portrait of the devastation and what was lost in the flood. The recording’s elegiac tone is unrelenting, building finally through Blanchard’s Ghost of 1927, Funeral Dirge, and Dear Mom to the kind of transcen- dence only the greatest blues can attain. The greatest jazz is based on the blues and this kind of tri- umph over adversity. This is inspired and inspiring, great jazz. CYRUS CHESTNUT Cyrus Plays Elvis (Koch) Jazz pianist Cyrus Chestnut’s Elvis Presley tribute is a play- ful romp. Using his command of gospel and blues-informed jazz improv- isation, Chestnut and his funky band reimagine Presley’s canon with highly stylized abandon, uncorking a second line-driven Hound Dog with echoes of Pro- fessor Longhair and other New Orleans keyboard giants. Don’t Be Cruel is given an elegant, urbane reading. Can’t Help Falling In Love features a surpris- ingly funky earthiness. Love Me Tender is rendered in waltz time, It’s Now Or Never with a Latin groove, while Chestnut’s version of Don’t sticks pretty close to Elvis’ cheesy, romantic reading. Suspicious Minds and In the Ghetto showcase the pianist’s mastery of the material, as does his most outlandish reading, a dazzling Heartbreak Hotel. Chestnut offers a swing original called Graceland and a tender reshaping of the old gospel tune, How Great Thou Art to wrap-up this surprisingly successful jazz tribute. THE BEST OF JAZZ CDs From bebop to Elvis, these discs define cool Canada’s unexpected Afghan war MARIA KUBACKI Canwest News Service Early in, early out — that was the plan back in February 2002 when Jean Chrétien’s Liberal government sent Canadian troops to Afghanistan as part of an international coalition mandated to drive out the Tal- iban in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. It was supposed to be a short-term mission, but six years later, Canada is still mired in a messy war that’s claimed the lives of 79 Cana- dian soldiers so far. A new Global Television doc- umentary examines how Canada ended up digging itself in deeper and deeper in Afghanistan. Revealed: The Path to War airs March 11 in advance of a parliamentary vote on an extension of the mission that would see Canadian troops remain in the volatile province of Kandahar until 2011. “I’m fascinated by trying to uncover how the decision was made,” said Global National anchor Kevin Newman, who co-produced, co-wrote and nar- rated the film. “It’s not always about help- ing the people of Afghanistan.” Some of the choices made along the way have been more about pleasing the Americans, the documentary suggests. Having decided against partic- ipating in the war in Iraq, Canada felt pressured to con- tinue making a major contribu- tion in Afghanistan. “People ask why are we in Kandahar,” said Newman. “It has less, probably, to do with Afghanistan than it has to do with not going to Iraq.” Based on the Shaughnessy Cohen Prize-winning book The Unexpected War: Canada in Kandahar by political scientist Janice Gross Stein and former Defence Department insider Eugene Lang, the documentary looks at Canada’s involvement in Afghanistan from the inside. It’s a chronological account built around interviews with the politicians who made deci- sions on policy as the conflict developed — including former prime ministers Jean Chrétien and Paul Martin, as well as for- mer defence ministers John McCallum and Bill Graham. The documentary also sug- gests that our military leaders — especially the current chief of the defence staff, General Rick Hillier saw Afghanistan as an opportunity to show the world that Cana- dian forces were capable not only of peacekeeping but of a combat role on the world stage. Canada was compelled to participate in the initial Afghanistan mission once NATO invoked Article 5, which states that an attack on one member is an attack on all. Beyond our responsibilities as a NATO member, there was also the need to show our loy- alty to the U.S. Still, Canada’s part in the war in Afghanistan was never meant to be an open-ended con- tribution, notes Stein in the film. The original plan was “Six months in, six months out, tidy, wrap a bow around the pack- age.” It’s turned out to be anything but tidy as Canada’s role grew to include leading the Interna- tional Security Assistance Force in Kabul in 2003 and assuming responsibility for the provincial reconstruction team in Kandahar in 2005 — a com- bat zone where 2,500 Canadian troops are still deployed. “This is the story of Canada going to war by incremental steps, without ever fully real- izing it,” says Stein in the doc- umentary. “We make a small little toe in the water, and then we pull out,” said Newman. “Then we go back a little longer, and then we pull out. . . Now we’re about to go in the longest with the proviso that we’re pulling out in 2011, but as the documentary sort of suggests, sometimes things change in the fullness of time and the 2011 date, which seems permanent today, may not end up being that at the end.” Newman says the documen- tary was inspired in part by The Best and the Brightest, David Halberstam’s book about how a series of incremental decisions led to the protracted U.S. war in Vietnam. The current decision mak- ers chose not to participate in the film, despite producers’ best efforts to persuade key Tories, including Prime Minis- ter Stephen Harper, to agree to interviews. Gen. Hillier was also approached. “Nobody would agree to talk to us,” said Newman. The Liberals, on the other hand, were able to speak freely now that they’re no longer in power. Former defence minister John McCallum, in particular, is disarmingly frank, speaking openly about how Canada ended up being stuck with the unenviable job of trying to bring security to the increas- ingly dangerous province of Kandahar. “We dithered, and so all the safe places were taken and we were left with Kanda- har.” 9/11 attacks set Canada on path to Kandahar ALEX STRACHAN Canwest News Service The story of Canada’s war in Afghanistan has been told before, but only in part. Revealed: The Path to War, an ambitious, hour-long news program produced and nar- rated by Global National anchor Kevin Newman, lays out the entire narrative, as recounted by the political lead- ers and military officials who made the decisions — deci- sions that, in Newman’s words, “Canadians have died for.” The program begins with the now-familiar images of hijacked passenger jets crash- ing into the World Trade Cen- ter on Sept. 11, 2001, but it doesn’t dwell. Jean Chrétien, prime minister at the time, is shown delivering a post-9/11 eulogy to then-U.S. ambassa- dor to Canada, Paul Cellucci — “In the end, it is not the words of your enemies that you remember; it is the silence of your friends . . . there will be no silence from Canada” — and former prime minister Paul Martin’s assertion, in a one-on- one interview with Newman, that, “We share more than just a continent” with the U.S. The Path to War provides a straight chronology of steadily escalating events, from the ini- tial agreement in 2002 to a short-term combat role in Kan- dahar — “early in and early out,” in the jargon of the time — to 2003’s peacekeeping role in Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul, to the 2005 decision to commit more than 2,000 troops to a full combat role in Kandahar. Path to War is more than a straight chronology, though. Newman sits down with a wide range of officials, including Chrétien, Martin, former defence minister Bill Graham, former veteran affairs minis- ter John McCallum, Martin aide Scott Reid and Cellucci himself. He gets them to con- fide what happened behind closed doors in the chambers of power. How the key decisions were made, when, and more impor- tantly, why, prove harder to pin down. Path to War relied on vet- eran foreign affairs policy ana- lyst Janice Gross Stein and former defence chief of staff Eugene Lang’s book The Unex- pected War as a template. Stein and Lang provide frequent tes- timony throughout the pro- gram. That testimony is both illuminating and sobering. “The problem,” Stein cau- tions at the outset, “is it’s easy to get in, but not so easy to get out of a deployment.” That’s easy to say with the clarity of hindsight, but it’s an important reminder just the same. Canadian Forces have been posted to Bosnia for 15 years, Stein notes; no one antic- ipated at the time they would be there for so long. The implication of Bosnia is plain, as Parliament wrestles with the dilemma about what to do in Afghanistan. That is the real reason for Path to War. It’s more than a straight history lesson. It sets the groundwork for the national debate: are Canadians prepared to sacrifice for a noble cause, and how long should the country remain committed to the mission if other countries in NATO are unwilling to commit their own military forces to a faraway fight? Rapidly unfolding events in Afghanistan frequently make it onto the nightly news. Instant satellite communica- tions, 24-hour news channels and a virtual army of experts and foreign policy analysts eager to jump in with their opinions have created the dis- orienting effect of a faraway combat mission unfolding in real time, before our eyes, in our living rooms. Path to War tries to put those events in a larger context. REVIEW What: Revealed:The Path to War When: Tuesday, 10 p.m. Channel: Global CANWEST NEWS SERVICE Global National news anchor Kevin Newman narrates Revealed: The Path to War, which airs on Tuesday at 10 p.m. Global Television documentary examines the decisions behind the military mission VIOLENCE NOW PLAYING Check Theatre Directory or SonyPicturesReleasing.ca for Locations & Showtimes NOW PLAYING Check Theatre Directory or SonyPicturesReleasing.ca for Locations & Showtimes “A PULSE-POUNDING THRILLER.” Carrie Rickey, THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER “A CLASSY ROMANTIC COCKTAIL...” ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY, Owen Gleiberman SEXUAL VIOLENCE

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Page 1: TIMES COLONIST SUNDAY, MARCH 9, 2008 B3 Canada s 9/11 …camosun.ca/documents/about/foundation/kevin-newman-news.pdf · 2020. 3. 4. · TIMES COLONIST ARTS SUNDAY, MARCH 9, 2008 B3

A R T STIMES COLONIST B3SUNDAY, MARCH 9, 2008

JOSEPH BLAKETimes Colonist

BRAD TURNER QUARTETSmall Wonder (Maximum Jazz)

Jazz renaissance man BradTurner sticks to trumpet andflugelhorn on this recentlyreleased CD. He’s ably backedby his Vancouver-based trio ofpianist Bruno Hubert, bassistAndré Lachance and drummerDylan Van der Schyff on arepertoire of eight of Turner’sevocative originals.

Crisply recorded at CBC Stu-dio 2 in Vancouver, the sessionshowcases Turner’s flawlesstechnique and boundless imag-ination on a varied collection oftightly wound tunes driven bythe leader’s excellent backingband.

They’ve been together for 14years, and you can hear it onevery track. Lachance and Vander Schyff’s loping rhythmicpropulsion is pushed along byHubert’s thoughtful keyboardaccents, while Turner burns anintense narrative through histune’s playful changes.

NORDIC CONNECTFlurry (ArtistShare)

Nanaimo-bred sisters Ingrid andChristine Jensen team-up withSwedish pianist Maggi Olin,Swedish bassist Mattias Welinand Ingrid’s husband, Jon Wikanon drums to produce this beau-tiful collection of richly texturedmodern jazz.

From the opening reading ofOlin’s title track and throughouta repertoire of nine originalcompositions, the quintet playsintuitive, expressive jazz. Chris-tine and Ingrid wrote most ofthe tunes and share tart, bitter-sweet dual lines in front of therhythm section’s softly throb-bing foundation, Ingrid dou-bling on trumpet and flugelhornand Christine on alto andsoprano sax. It’s a warm, under-stated, emotionally powerfuloffering.

MILES DAVISThe Essential Miles Davis(Columbia Legacy)

This two-CD set surveys MilesDavis’ many-faceted careerfrom his teenage breakthroughwith Charlie Parker in 1945 tohis late-season collaboration withmulti-instrumentalist MarcusMiller and Miles’ muted trum-pet brilliance on 1986’s Portia.

The 23 performances captureDavis’ mercurial changes withselections from Birth of the Cool,hard-bop jams on Prestige, col-laborations with John Coltraneand the modal triumph of SoWhat, the orchestral brillianceof his work with Gil Evans, andseveral examples of arguably hisbest band featuring Herbie Han-cock, Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter,and Tony Williams.

Disc two shines a light onseveral of Davis’ overlookedelectronic masterpieces includ-ing cuts from Bitches Brew,Live Evil, On the Corner, We

Want Miles, You’re UnderArrest, and Tutu.

The scope of the musician’slifetime achievements is breath-taking. If you could only haveone Miles Davis CD, this wouldbe the one.

TERRENCE BLANCHARDA Tale of God’s Will (a requiem for katrina)

New Orleans-bred trumpet starTerrence Blanchard has pro-duced most of the evocativemusic for Spike Lee’s movies.This recording grew out of Blan-chard’s work on Lee’s recentdocumentary, When the LeveesBroke, and it has a sumptuous,cinematic scope.

Blanchard conducts theNorthwest Sinfonia on severalcuts, framing his soulful hornand fine, young band’s offeringswith added grace. It’s simplygorgeous, heartbreakingly beau-tiful music.

Drummer Kendrick Scott,bassist Derrick Hodge, saxo-phonist Bruce Winston, andpianist Aaron Parks add theircompositions to the bandleader’ssong cycle of original work, pro-ducing a sonic portrait of thedevastation and what was lost inthe flood.

The recording’s elegiac toneis unrelenting, building finallythrough Blanchard’s Ghost of1927, Funeral Dirge, and DearMom to the kind of transcen-dence only the greatest bluescan attain.

The greatest jazz is based on

the blues and this kind of tri-umph over adversity. This isinspired and inspiring, greatjazz.

CYRUS CHESTNUTCyrus Plays Elvis (Koch)

Jazz pianist Cyrus Chestnut’sElvis Presley tribute is a play-ful romp.

Using his command of gospeland blues-informed jazz improv-isation, Chestnut and his funkyband reimagine Presley’s canonwith highly stylized abandon,uncorking a second line-drivenHound Dog with echoes of Pro-fessor Longhair and other NewOrleans keyboard giants. Don’tBe Cruel is given an elegant,urbane reading. Can’t HelpFalling In Love features a surpris-ingly funky earthiness. Love MeTender is rendered in waltz time,It’s Now Or Never with a Latingroove, while Chestnut’s versionof Don’t sticks pretty close toElvis’ cheesy, romantic reading.

Suspicious Minds and In theGhetto showcase the pianist’smastery of the material, as doeshis most outlandish reading, adazzling Heartbreak Hotel.Chestnut offers a swing originalcalled Graceland and a tenderreshaping of the old gospel tune,How Great Thou Art to wrap-upthis surprisingly successful jazztribute.

THE BEST OF JAZZ CDs

From bebop to Elvis,these discs define cool

Canada’sunexpectedAfghan warMARIA KUBACKICanwest News Service

Early in, early out — that wasthe plan back in February 2002when Jean Chrétien’s Liberalgovernment sent Canadiantroops to Afghanistan as partof an international coalitionmandated to drive out the Tal-iban in the wake of the Sept. 11terrorist attacks.

It was supposed to be ashort-term mission, but sixyears later, Canada is stillmired in a messy war that’sclaimed the lives of 79 Cana-dian soldiers so far.

A new Global Television doc-umentary examines howCanada ended up digging itselfin deeper and deeper inAfghanistan.

Revealed: The Path to Warairs March 11 in advance of aparliamentary vote on anextension of the mission thatwould see Canadian troopsremain in the volatile provinceof Kandahar until 2011.

“I’m fascinated by trying touncover how the decision wasmade,” said Global Nationalanchor Kevin Newman, whoco-produced, co-wrote and nar-rated the film.

“It’s not always about help-ing the people of Afghanistan.”

Some of the choices madealong the way have been moreabout pleasing the Americans,the documentary suggests.Having decided against partic-ipating in the war in Iraq,Canada felt pressured to con-tinue making a major contribu-tion in Afghanistan.

“People ask why are we inKandahar,” said Newman. “Ithas less, probably, to do withAfghanistan than it has to dowith not going to Iraq.”

Based on the ShaughnessyCohen Prize-winning book TheUnexpected War: Canada inKandahar by political scientistJanice Gross Stein and formerDefence Department insiderEugene Lang, the documentary

looks at Canada’s involvementin Afghanistan from the inside.

It’s a chronological accountbuilt around interviews withthe politicians who made deci-sions on policy as the conflictdeveloped — including formerprime ministers Jean Chrétienand Paul Martin, as well as for-mer defence ministers JohnMcCallum and Bill Graham.

The documentary also sug-gests that our military leaders— especially the current chiefof the defence staff, GeneralRick Hillier — sawAfghanistan as an opportunityto show the world that Cana-dian forces were capable notonly of peacekeeping but of acombat role on the world stage.

Canada was compelled toparticipate in the initialAfghanistan mission onceNATO invoked Article 5, whichstates that an attack on onemember is an attack on all.Beyond our responsibilities asa NATO member, there wasalso the need to show our loy-alty to the U.S.

Still, Canada’s part in thewar in Afghanistan was nevermeant to be an open-ended con-tribution, notes Stein in thefilm. The original plan was “Sixmonths in, six months out, tidy,wrap a bow around the pack-age.”

It’s turned out to be anythingbut tidy as Canada’s role grewto include leading the Interna-

tional Security AssistanceForce in Kabul in 2003 andassuming responsibility for theprovincial reconstruction teamin Kandahar in 2005 — a com-bat zone where 2,500 Canadiantroops are still deployed.

“This is the story of Canadagoing to war by incrementalsteps, without ever fully real-izing it,” says Stein in the doc-umentary.

“We make a small little toein the water, and then we pullout,” said Newman. “Then wego back a little longer, and thenwe pull out. . . Now we’re aboutto go in the longest with theproviso that we’re pulling outin 2011, but as the documentarysort of suggests, sometimesthings change in the fullness oftime and the 2011 date, whichseems permanent today, maynot end up being that at theend.”

Newman says the documen-tary was inspired in part byThe Best and the Brightest,David Halberstam’s book abouthow a series of incrementaldecisions led to the protractedU.S. war in Vietnam.

The current decision mak-ers chose not to participate inthe film, despite producers’best efforts to persuade keyTories, including Prime Minis-ter Stephen Harper, to agree tointerviews. Gen. Hillier wasalso approached.

“Nobody would agree to talkto us,” said Newman.

The Liberals, on the otherhand, were able to speak freelynow that they’re no longer inpower.

Former defence ministerJohn McCallum, in particular,is disarmingly frank, speakingopenly about how Canadaended up being stuck with theunenviable job of trying tobring security to the increas-ingly dangerous province ofKandahar. “We dithered, and soall the safe places were takenand we were left with Kanda-har.”

9/11 attacks setCanada on pathto Kandahar

ALEX STRACHANCanwest News Service

The story of Canada’s war inAfghanistan has been toldbefore, but only in part.

Revealed: The Path to War,an ambitious, hour-long newsprogram produced and nar-rated by Global Nationalanchor Kevin Newman, laysout the entire narrative, asrecounted by the political lead-ers and military officials whomade the decisions — deci-sions that, in Newman’s words,“Canadians have died for.”

The program begins withthe now-familiar images ofhijacked passenger jets crash-ing into the World Trade Cen-ter on Sept. 11, 2001, but itdoesn’t dwell. Jean Chrétien,prime minister at the time, isshown delivering a post-9/11eulogy to then-U.S. ambassa-dor to Canada, Paul Cellucci —“In the end, it is not the wordsof your enemies that youremember; it is the silence ofyour friends . . . there will beno silence from Canada” — andformer prime minister PaulMartin’s assertion, in a one-on-one interview with Newman,that, “We share more than justa continent” with the U.S.

The Path to War provides astraight chronology of steadilyescalating events, from the ini-tial agreement in 2002 to ashort-term combat role in Kan-dahar — “early in and earlyout,” in the jargon of the time— to 2003’s peacekeeping rolein Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul,to the 2005 decision to commitmore than 2,000 troops to a fullcombat role in Kandahar.

Path to War is more than astraight chronology, though.Newman sits down with a widerange of officials, includingChrétien, Martin, formerdefence minister Bill Graham,former veteran affairs minis-ter John McCallum, Martin

aide Scott Reid and Celluccihimself. He gets them to con-fide what happened behindclosed doors in the chambersof power.

How the key decisions weremade, when, and more impor-tantly, why, prove harder to pindown.

Path to War relied on vet-eran foreign affairs policy ana-lyst Janice Gross Stein andformer defence chief of staffEugene Lang’s book The Unex-pected War as a template. Steinand Lang provide frequent tes-timony throughout the pro-gram. That testimony is bothilluminating and sobering.

“The problem,” Stein cau-tions at the outset, “is it’s easyto get in, but not so easy to getout of a deployment.”

That’s easy to say with theclarity of hindsight, but it’s animportant reminder just thesame. Canadian Forces havebeen posted to Bosnia for 15years, Stein notes; no one antic-ipated at the time they wouldbe there for so long.

The implication of Bosnia isplain, as Parliament wrestleswith the dilemma about whatto do in Afghanistan.

That is the real reason forPath to War. It’s more than astraight history lesson. It setsthe groundwork for thenational debate: are Canadiansprepared to sacrifice for anoble cause, and how longshould the country remaincommitted to the mission ifother countries in NATO areunwilling to commit their ownmilitary forces to a farawayfight?

Rapidly unfolding events inAfghanistan frequently makeit onto the nightly news.Instant satellite communica-tions, 24-hour news channelsand a virtual army of expertsand foreign policy analystseager to jump in with theiropinions have created the dis-orienting effect of a farawaycombat mission unfolding inreal time, before our eyes, inour living rooms. Path to Wartries to put those events in alarger context.

REVIEWWhat: Revealed: The Path to WarWhen: Tuesday, 10 p.m.Channel: Global

CANWEST NEWS SERVICEGlobal National news anchor Kevin Newman narrates Revealed:The Path to War, which airs on Tuesday at 10 p.m.

Global Television documentary examines the decisions behind the military mission

VIOLENCE

NOW PLAYING Check Theatre Directory or SonyPicturesReleasing.ca for Locations & Showtimes

NOW PLAYINGCheck Theatre Directory or SonyPicturesReleasing.ca for Locations & Showtimes

“A PULSE-POUNDING THRILLER.”Carrie Rickey, THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

“A CLASSY ROMANTIC COCKTAIL...”ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY, Owen Gleiberman

SEXUALVIOLENCE