If “sanctuary jurisdictions” are notified and the Trump administration determines that they “remain in defiance,” the attorney general and the secretary of Homeland Security are then empowered to pursue whatever “legal remedies and enforcement measures” they consider necessary to make them comply.
only happened last year. This is not the meditation on time that John Crowley was going for with his romantic dramaabout new love, family, cancer and ambition, but with subjects as heavy as those it’s also OK to have a bit of fun with it. The movie makes its Max debut on Friday, Feb. 7. I found myself mostly dry-eyed
hung up on some of the more unbelievable story points, writing “The main reason to see ‘We Live In Time’ is not the promise of crying or the realities of having a young kid, though, but the quietly affecting performances from Pugh and Garfield… It is charming and silly and sometimes cringey — other people’s relationships always are.”— Pharrell Williams’ life story is told using Lego in Morgan Neville’s unconventional documentary “Piece by Piece,” which begins streaming on Peacock on Friday, Feb. 7. In his review for the Associated Press,“is a bright, clever song-filled biopic that pretends it’s a behind-the-scenes documentary using small plastic bricks, angles and curves to celebrate an artist known for his quirky soul. It is deep and surreal and often adorable. Is it high concept or low? Like Williams, it’s a bit of both.”
— Six decades ago, thereleased “A Love Supreme,” a revelatory work of modal and spiritual jazz largely considered to be Coltrane’s greatest collection and certainly his most popular. On Friday, Feb. 7, listeners can re-experience the album with “A Love Supreme: 60th Anniversary Edition,” out via Impulse! Records. And if streaming isn’t enough — they’re released a limited-edition vinyl version, too.
— The Dominican singer-songwriter Natti Natasha is tomorrow’s talent today, effortlessly marrying reggaeton, bachata and pop. That’s evidenced by her forthcoming project produced by
“Natti Natasha en Amargue.” “Tu Loca” is modern Música tropicale balladry; the slow and sexy “Quiéreme Menos” deserves a place on your playlist — she even performed that one live at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade last year. If it is great enough for the most delicious holiday, it is great enough for all.Shirin kept thinking of Kian throughout the decade-long separation. Even though Shirin kept in touch with her female friends from her high school days, she always had a sense of unfulfillment, a sense of pessimism and skepticism. Her parents had separated when she was in college.
“Shirin thinks there is an ugliness inside her sometimes, some kind of repressed anger that she takes out on other people in her mind,” the author writes.But her thoughts of Kian, and her desire for them to be together again one day, give her a sense of hope and relief.
When the two reunite again in London at their friend Millie’s 27th birthday party, Shirin’s love for her old friend resurfaces. But it comes a little too late: Salma, who Kian was now seeing, is also at the party. Shirin even asks Kian to kiss her, but he doesn’t because she’s drunk.These would-be lovers have one final meeting — at a dinner party in New York in 2020, where Kian is now living. She confesses to having a lot of regrets and that she had been thinking about him during their decade-long separation. Kian confesses he had imagined her kissing him while they were in school.