Each year in the United States, thousands of people develop occipital neuralgia, a condition marked by chronic pain running up the back of the neck and head. The condition can ari ...
I tried the Bob and Brad Hand Massager. After testing, I recommend it to anyone with hand, wrist, or finger pain, especially ...
Are the brains of left-handers different than those of right-handers? A recent study investigated this question from a new ...
The Venice Film Festival hosted the world premiere of director Julian Schnabel’s In the Hand of Dante, adapted from the novel by author Nick Tosches. Attending the premiere were members of the film’s ...
In the Hand of Dante, writer-director Julian Schnabel‘s ambitious adaptation of the Nick Tosches novel that moves between the 14th and 21st centuries, received a 9 1/2-minute ovation after its world ...
Venice: The painter/filmmaker's 700-year-spanning shrine to the Italian poet gives us two Oscar Isaacs — one in present-day, the other in 14th-century Florence and Renaissance Faire garb — and a ...
Schnabel has always been drawn to extreme figures, usually artists, who convert what they’re creating into a matter of life and death. (His last film, in 2018, was the fever-dream Vincent van Gogh ...
Well, at least it’s pretty to look at. Julian Schnabel’s pretentious new opus “In the Hand of Dante” stars Oscar Isaac as real-life journalist, novelist and poet Nick Tosches, who gets sucked into a ...
Researchers from Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Coimbra have discovered that the human brain organizes hand movements much like an alphabet — combining a small set of simple motions ...
Premiering out of competition at Venice, the film — based on Nick Tosches' 2002 novel revolving around Dante's 'Divine Comedy' — also features Jason Momoa, Al Pacino and Martin Scorsese. By Caryn ...
Pink is definitely Jason Momoa’s color. The actor stole the show at the “In the Hand of Dante” premiere at the Venice Film Festival Wednesday, sporting a blush pink suit on the red carpet. But it’s ...
The two actors are compelling, but Olivier Assayas’s film has an episodic, one-thing-after-another quality that doesn’t allow it to gather force. It’s close to an hour into “The Wizard of the Kremlin” ...