Lifestyle
Tweeters you should follow
March 25, 2010
Calendar: March 25 to March 31
March 25, 2010
Inside Column: Un-funny games
March 25, 2010
St. Paddy’s Day Shenanigans
March 17, 2010
Album review: Gorillaz’s Plastic Beach innovative, surreal
March 17, 2010
Album review: The Winter of Mixed Drinks pining, folksy
March 17, 2010
Calendar: March 18 to March 24
March 17, 2010
Inside Column: McLovin she is not
March 17, 2010
Film review: ‘Ghost Writer’ thrills
March 11, 2010
Film review: Burton has lost his muchness
March 11, 2010
NU Band Spotlight: The Lone Pine Cones
March 11, 2010
Trey Songz in Boston with Jay-Z
March 11, 2010

November 12, 2025

November 12, 2025

Event of the Week - Unearthing films at Boston fest: It sure isn’t Hollywood, but there are plenty of cinematic happenings afoot in Boston if you know where to look. This week, the place to look is “underground” – at the Boston Underground Film Festival (BUFF), that is. According to the website, BUFF is “a celebration of the bizarre and insane,” made up of “uncompromising, unflinching film and video” and – in general – “hazardous to your health.” Included among the area premieres is “American Grindhouse” (pictured).
Remember, back in the day, when a kiss was a big deal? When it wasn’t just an act of pity or sloppy drunkenness, but a mutual acknowledgment of feelings for each other? Somehow, everything in the dating arena got so complicated in the transition from child to adult. 

Event of the Week: “A Small Act” with a big result: Would a heartwarming tale of success and charity help perk things up during the mid–semester stretch? Here’s one for the ages: A Swedish woman named Hilde Back contributes a small amount of money to provide for the schooling of a young Kenyan student, Chris Mburu. She doesn’t think much of it at the time, but he goes on to attend Harvard and become a United Nations human rights lawyer, establishing a charity in her name to educate more third–world students. “A Small Act,” a documentary about the unlikely true story, will screen at the Coolidge Corner Theatre, and Mburu will be present to speak about his life. 290 Harvard St., Brookline.; 7 p.m.; $15, $12 for students; 617–734–2500.
There are moments in life we are programmed to look forward to. It is from these moments that we judge all others, upon them which we base the paths of our lives, and because of which the person we really are remains thrust in shadows, a pale and shivering facsimile of the beautiful being of wholeness which is to come emerge after them. For college students, that moment is – for many – the day we can legally purchase alcohol. 



