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One of a kindMaxwell Rabbon November 9, 2022 at 3:00 pm

The 28th Black Harvest Film Festival, hosted at the Gene Siskel Film Center, invites Chicago to experience a rich selection of films devoted to amplifying Black storytelling and promoting the careers of young filmmakers. But this year, the monthlong celebration differs from the previous 27, following the death of beloved cofounder Sergio Mims, who passed away in October at 67. The 2022 festival will serve as a tribute to Mims’s cinematic legacy, featuring an impressive lineup that includes 19 feature films, four short film programs, and more than 15 filmmaker and cast appearances. 

“The Black Harvest Film Festival has always been a reunion of filmmakers and film lovers,” says Jean de St. Aubin, executive director at the Gene Siskel Film Center. “This year, with the passing of Sergio Mims, it will be bittersweet. But we rejoice in what Sergio has created—a monthlong celebration of Black storytelling that has thrived for 28 years and counting. I look forward to seeing our loyal [Black Harvest] audience, welcoming new friends, and sharing Sergio’s stories along with those on the screen.”

Black Harvest opened on November 4 with a ceremony dedicated to Mims’s memory—one defined by his multifaceted passion for film as an educator, a critic, a curator, and a film lover. During the reception, the festival awarded the Black Harvest Film Festival Legacy Award to Chicago casting director Sharon King and announced the Richard and Ellen Sandor Family Black Harvest Film Festival Prize winners. 

“Opening Night celebration feels like a reunion each year, and is an exciting and joyful kickoff to the entire festival—complete with award presentations, short film screenings, and a reception,” de St. Aubin says. “It is my favorite day of the year at the Gene Siskel Film Center.”

Before the Black Harvest Film Festival launched 28 years ago, the Film Center hosted the Blacklight Film Festival with Floyd Webb; however, mounting economic and personal reasons led to its untimely end. This left Chicago without a film festival dedicated to screening international Black filmmaking, until Barbara Scharres, the former director of programming at the Film Center, called Mims to help create the Black Harvest festival. 

The inaugural Black Harvest festival started as a ten-day event with 22 screenings, and now, the festival hosts 41 screenings and a massive itinerary of events. And Mims’s legacy lives on in the festival, which he helped curate during the last month of his life. The selection represents the robust filmmaking occurring worldwide, highlighting underrepresented stories and giving Chicago a glimpse of what Mims called “lots of Black joy.”

“Sergio’s great enthusiasm and his overwhelming, populist embrace of Black film in all its manifestations are the things that I believe will endure in the spirit of the festival,” Scharres says, sharing Mims’s role in Chicago film. “Black Harvest continues to be a festival that makes wide-ranging selections, and is exceptionally open to considering the work of first-time filmmakers and those in the early stages of their careers.”

Mims’s legacy is defined by his willingness to support emerging filmmakers, and the Black Harvest Film Festival is imbued with this mission. Since its inception, the festival has emphasized the importance of supporting filmmakers of color, especially in the early stages of their careers. The festival provides a platform for filmmakers to engage with their audiences and vice versa. 

“We were seeing careers grow and flourish before our eyes,” Scharres says. “For young filmmakers, Black Harvest often functioned as their very first opportunity to present their work before a live audience and receive feedback. My hope for the future is that Black Harvest will continue to be the very alive and interactive forum for Black film that it has always aimed to be.” 

Black Harvest Film FestivalIn-person through 11/20, virtual through 11/27Gene Siskel Film Center, 164 N. StateFestival passes $60, Film Center members $30; single tickets $12, Film Center members $6siskelfilmcenter.org/blackharvest

Black Harvest’s selections range from deeply inspiring documentaries to thrilling horror movies, providing any interested film lovers with their genre of choice. The feature films include the psychological horror Nanny (November 15), following a Senegalese immigrant hired by an affluent New York couple; the coming-of-age film Jasmine Is a Star (November 19), telling the story of a 16-year-old girl with albinism; and the heart-wrenching Mars One (November 11 and 12), exploring the bonds of family and love when faced with challenging changes. 

On November 12 and 20, the festival will screen Rewind & Play, a fascinating documentary centered around the famed jazz pianist Thelonious Monk. The film illuminates the casual racism and jarring disrespect the beloved musician experienced on French TV in 1969, alongside his performance at the Salle Pleyel concert hall. 

Accompanying the new feature films, Black Harvest will also host several restoration and anniversary screenings. The revived films include Malcolm X (November 19), screened on 35mm, and the 50th anniversary 4K restoration of Sidney Poitier’s directorial debut Buck and the Preacher (November 9)—a reimagined classic Western. The festival will also revisit the comedy Cooley High on November 16 in memory of Mims, following a tribute to the late cofounder. 

The festival also screens four original shorts programs including Sisters in Scene (November 17), presenting six stories of Black femininity, self-expression, and survival; Cine Lado a Lado (November 10 and 15), featuring complex stories about multifaceted African identities; From the Block (November 11 and 13), promoting Chicago-based filmmakers; and Figures & Guardians (November 12), showcasing emotional stories about guardians, mothers, fathers, and the people who raised us.

Closing out the impressive selection of in-person screenings, the Black Harvest Film Festival will host its annual 90s costume night with a screening of Boomerang on November 20. The essential 90s romantic comedy starring Eddie Murphy and Halle Berry was handpicked by Mims. Following the in-person screenings, the festival will host virtual screenings from November 21 to 27. 

“The 28th festival is a tribute to Sergio’s dogged determination to suggest the best for our screens, to ensure emerging filmmakers were in the same spotlight as the established auteurs, and his efforts to make local filmmakers feel like stars and our audience to feel like a family,” says Rebecca Fons, the Gene Siskel Film Center’s director of programming. “We will miss him immensely—his bold opinions, his wit, his knowledge, and his camaraderie—and dedicate each moment of Black Harvest to his memory.”


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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One of a kindMaxwell Rabbon November 9, 2022 at 3:00 pm Read More »

Suicide Prevention Awareness Month has come and gone, but its message continues all year longChicago Readeron November 9, 2022 at 3:10 pm

National Suicide Prevention Awareness Month takes place every September, but it’s important to be proactive and keep the conversation about mental wellness going strong throughout the year. But if you know someone struggling with depression or thoughts of suicide, approaching them about it can feel daunting.

With that in mind, Nature’s Grace and Wellness has compiled some Do’s and Don’ts to consider when sparking a conversation with someone about their mental health.

Do let them know that you’re there to listen without judgment. You’re initiating this conversation because you care about them and you’re concerned about their well-being and safety. 

Don’t be afraid to be direct and ask hard questions, such as: Are you planning on harming or killing yourself or others? Do you have access to weapons in your home or elsewhere?

Do ask the person what is causing their immediate distress. Asking “what” questions, as opposed to “why” questions allows them to pinpoint the factors contributing to their situation without feeling pressured to justify their feelings.

Do be an active listener. Active listening techniques, such as asking open-ended questions, and using words of affirmation (“I see”) and non-verbal cues (nodding or leaning forward) can help build trust and improve communication.

Don’t try to diagnose or suggest treatment options.

Don’t center yourself. Many people tend to show empathy by sharing similar experiences or interjecting, but this can inadvertently take the focus away from the person in need of support. 

Do remind the person that they are not alone. 

Do guide the person to reputable resources and doctors, or if necessary, a hospital emergency room.

Don’t leave the person alone if there is immediate danger or the situation feels “off. Trust your intuition.

Do call 911 to request an ambulance and a Crisis Trained Officer in the event of a non-violent mental-health crisis,

Do call 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline (formerly the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline) as needed for 24/7 support.

Don’t be afraid to discuss your mental health. Opening up to a doctor, therapist, or a trusted friend or loved one is an act of bravery that can help us become stronger and healthier. 

Do continue to be proactive and Spark the Conversation about sucide prevention.

If you or a loved one are in crisis or having thoughts of suicide, please dial 988, call 1-800-273-TALK (8255), or text TALK to 741741. If 911 is needed, ask specifically for an ambulance and for a Crisis Intervention Trained (CIT) police officer. To learn more about Nature’s Grace and Wellness, visit naturesgraceandwellness.com.

Be sure to follow @naturesgraceil on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.

Visit https://chicagoreader.com/special/spark-the-conversation/ to read other stories in our series.

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Suicide Prevention Awareness Month has come and gone, but its message continues all year longChicago Readeron November 9, 2022 at 3:10 pm Read More »

Sound and furyJack Helbigon November 9, 2022 at 3:10 pm

Their premise is not half bad: a “still relatively new” (as they describe themselves) theater company uses a fictional 125th-anniversary “jubilee” to bring together a collection of short sketches, some drawn from previous shows, some original to this one. Unfortunately, most of the comedy sketches, created by Sid Feldman and directed by Wm Bullion, are not particularly funny. And the performances are so rough and broadly performed that the little comedy in the material gets lost in the noise. 

The IneptidemicThrough 11/19: Thu-Sat 8 PM, Sun 7 PM, Otherworld Theatre, 3914 N. Clark, conspirewithus.org, $25 ($15 students/seniors)

The noise, though, is the point. You see, the Conspirators set as their mission to perform in the loud, broad, way, way over the top “neo-commedia” style concocted 30 years ago by, among others, the folks at the late, lamented (by some) New Crime Productions. As part of the style, the actors wear garish, aggressively nonnaturalist gray-and-white makeup reminiscent of pre-WWII German cabaret theater, and all of their movements are accompanied, Kabuki-style, by a live percussionist.

This unusual, highly artificial aesthetic only works with material written specifically for this restricted style—the New Criminals tried it with a stage adaptation of Hunter S. Thompson’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and sank like a stone—and demands a lot more from actors than this particular show’s cast can deliver. A couple of sketches really shine here—in particular a vicious little satire slashing at former President Trump just soars. But most of the time, the material—and the audience—is not well served by the show’s performance style.


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Sound and furyJack Helbigon November 9, 2022 at 3:10 pm Read More »

Trust the masksDmitry Samarovon November 9, 2022 at 3:24 pm

Drawing from a well that’s 500 years old and who knows how deep takes nerve. Yet that’s what Laughing Stock attempts with this contemporary take on commedia dell’arte. You could say that theater, and, by extension, TV and movies, have never really escaped the archetypes and tropes set in Italy so long ago, but to put on the old masks and employ the exaggerated gestures is a lot more than a nod to the past. So what does this company bring to the well-worn scenario of family, friends, and servants plotting a patriarch’s demise to make off with his riches? Well, there’s that ponderous subtitle and a lot of attendant dialogue about who should and should not inherit or prosper after a wealthy person’s passing. 

Over My Dead Body; Or, How to Distribute Generational WealthThrough 12/4: Thu-Fri 8 PM, Sat 2 and 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, Athenaeum Center for Thought & Culture, 2936 N. Southport, athenaeumcenter.org, pay what you can ($25 suggested donation)

I have no doubt of the company’s earnestness. They devised their play to comment on a real-life societal problem in 2022. But their words bog down a production which is at its best in wordless moments. Director Antonio Fava has brought not only decades of experience from the old country but also his beautiful handmade leather masks. It’s remarkable how evocative a figure crossing a mostly bare stage with one of these elemental expressions can be. That medieval magic still works when it’s not interrupted by blather and explanation. Those fixed grimaces, squints, and caterwauls convey more than a mountain of words. I wish Laughing Stock trusted the masks to do more of the work they were designed to do.


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Trust the masksDmitry Samarovon November 9, 2022 at 3:24 pm Read More »

3 way-too-early trades the Chicago Bulls should considerRyan Heckmanon November 9, 2022 at 3:06 pm

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This NBA season is only a few weeks old, but already there could be some turmoil brewing around the league. For the Chicago Bulls, that turmoil could turn into an advantage if the front office is willing to take advantage of it.

It is a tad early to even speculate what might happen at the 2023 NBA trade deadline, but there could be some big names moved if things continue down this road for a few select teams.

The Bulls sit at 6-6-, currently, and are the no. 6 seed in the Eastern Conference. Thus far, it’s been all about maintaining without Lonzo Ball and, sometimes, Zach LaVine.

Between the two of them, the Bulls have had significant knee worries, with Ball having not played for over nine months now. LaVine, on the other hand, has been on a bit of restriction as he hasn’t played in both games of back-to-back scenarios, continuing to watch the pain in his knee. At this point, though, the Bulls have to be forward thinking.

The Chicago Bulls may have some intriguing options at the 2022-2023 NBA trade deadline, and early speculation is always fun.

There are several teams who already look like they will be sellers at the deadline, with some teams up in the air in terms of what we think they’ll do. The obvious teams are ones to go after if you’re Arturas Karnisovas, but making calls all around the league is a smart route.

Karnisovas has proven to be aggressive and, even surprising, when looking at building this roster. So, nothing should be off the table when it comes to making a deal happen.

The roster, as it sits, is a pretty well-rounded one if Ball were to come back healthy. But still, is it good enough to win a title? That’s the question. The Bulls have some pieces available that could be moved for the right upgrade, so that’s exactly what we look at doing here with a handful of trades to consider with the deadline three months away.

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3 way-too-early trades the Chicago Bulls should considerRyan Heckmanon November 9, 2022 at 3:06 pm Read More »

Chicago Cubs: 3 most likely landing spots for Willson ContrerasVincent Pariseon November 9, 2022 at 1:00 pm

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The Chicago Cubs extended a qualifying offer to Willson Contreras who has been one of their best players for years.

He decided to decline it which will make him an unrestricted free agent. He is free to sign with any team. That is a huge development as another great player hits the market.

It is likely that he will actually leave town and go to a different team that needs a new catcher. There are plenty of those across the league.

There are spots for Contreras that many would consider a “great fit”. These are the three likeliest landing spots for Willson Contreras in free agency:

1. Detroit Tigers

The Detroit Tigers could really use a star catcher like Willson Contreras.

The Detroit Tigers already have a few ties to the Chicago Cubs already and Willson Contreras would make a lot of sense for them. They have Tucker Barnhart leaving in free agency so they are in the market for a great catcher. Contreras is certainly a great catcher that can help them.

Going from Barnhart to Contreras would be a downgrade defensively but not enough that you’d take him over Willson Contreras because the latter is a significantly better hitter. He would be a great fit for this Detroit Tigers team that is desperate for something positive.

The Tigers also have a young pitching staff when healthy and Contreras has been great at being a catcher in a situation like that later in his career up to this point. If the Detroit Tigers truly want to try redeeming themselves in 2023, adding a stud like Willson Contreras can help that.

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Chicago Cubs: 3 most likely landing spots for Willson ContrerasVincent Pariseon November 9, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »

NBA Power Rankings: Why L.A. rivals are headed in opposite directionson November 9, 2022 at 1:09 pm

The Utah Jazz have the best record in the Western Conference, and that is only one of many surprises that have percolated throughout the first month of the 2022 NBA season.

The ascending 8-2 Cleveland Cavaliers had a chance at a 9-1 start and a share of first place in the Eastern Conference before blowing a 13-point lead to the LA Clippers. The Clippers are starting to find their own groove after a rough return for a now-sidelined Kawhi Leonard and Paul George. They could soon be an early favorite in the wide-open West, especially when Leonard returns.

The Atlanta Hawks made an early statement by handing the previously undefeated Milwaukee Bucks their first loss, and they pulled it off without star point guard Trae Young. Once Young is back on the court, the Hawks could be good enough to challenge Milwaukee or Cleveland in the East.

Luka Doncic is looking like an early-season front-runner for MVP with a historic stat line for any player over the first nine games. The Dallas Mavericks haven’t faced any of the other expected contenders in the West but, with Doncic playing at his current level, they could prove to be trouble for any team.

Note: Throughout the regular season, our panel (Kendra Andrews, Tim Bontemps, Jamal Collier, Nick Friedell, Andrew Lopez, Tim MacMahon, Dave McMenamin and Ohm Youngmisuk) is ranking all 30 teams from top to bottom, taking stock of which teams are playing the best basketball now and which teams are looking most like title contenders.

Previous rankings: Week 1 Week 2

NBA Power Rankings: Why L.A. rivals are headed in opposite directionson November 9, 2022 at 1:09 pm Read More »

Chicago’s Black Cross Hotel hex us with their postpunk- and horror-inspired debut

One of the few silver linings of the pandemic shutting down the entire concert industry for a prolonged stretch was that it occasionally prompted longtime musician friends to collaborate in projects they might not have had time for otherwise. Sometimes the results sound so natural—as they do in local rock powerhouse Black Cross Hotel—that it feels like they should’ve been playing together all along. Formed by synth player Andrew Ragin of the Atlas Moth and guitarist Marcus Eliopulos of Stabbing Westward, who bonded over their shared love for Killing Joke and classic 80s horror movies, this supergroup of sorts also includes Atlas Moth drummer Mike Miczek, Whipped vocalist Dee DeEmme, and bassist and producer Sanford Parker.

Black Cross Hotel’s brand-new LP, Hex, is a shivery delight that’s perfect for drawing out creepy and spooky vibes. Each track is a deep dive into the metaphorical underpinnings and outsider perspective baked into the horror genre, and DeEmme (who’s nonbinary) explores cult classics such as The Thing, The Fog, and Halloween II from a queer perspective—a very rich field of inquiry (see also the Queer for Fear documentary series by Hannibal showrunner Bryan Fuller on Shudder). On the album’s grinding first single, “Windows,” the monster of The Thing becomes a sympathetic presence amid chiming guitars and pulsing synths. But sympathy for the hunter turns into empathy with the hunted in “The Fugitive,” with its provocative, chilling buildups, surging hard-rock momentum, and needling, desperate synths. Black Cross Hotel flex their full fury with “138,” a swaggering stadium-size cover of the Misfits’ “We Are 138,” while erie synth waves cradle and support the crunchy metal riffs of “Hitchhiker.” 

It’d be a shame if a debut this self-assured were a one-off, and I was glad to hear this won’t be the last we hear from Black Cross Hotel—the band have said they’ve already written another album’s worth of songs. But for now, we get to celebrate Hex at this record-release party, which features a solid bill of local acts: noise-rock trio Salvation, melodic hardcore quartet Canadian Rifle, and postpunk band Pink Frost, who released an album of their own, Until the Summer Comes, in September.

Black Cross Hotel Salvation, Pink Frost, and Canadian Rifle open. Mon 11/14, 8:30 PM, Empty Bottle, 1035 N. Western, free, 21+


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Chicago’s Black Cross Hotel hex us with their postpunk- and horror-inspired debutMonica Kendrickon November 9, 2022 at 12:00 pm

One of the few silver linings of the pandemic shutting down the entire concert industry for a prolonged stretch was that it occasionally prompted longtime musician friends to collaborate in projects they might not have had time for otherwise. Sometimes the results sound so natural—as they do in local rock powerhouse Black Cross Hotel—that it feels like they should’ve been playing together all along. Formed by synth player Andrew Ragin of the Atlas Moth and guitarist Marcus Eliopulos of Stabbing Westward, who bonded over their shared love for Killing Joke and classic 80s horror movies, this supergroup of sorts also includes Atlas Moth drummer Mike Miczek, Whipped vocalist Dee DeEmme, and bassist and producer Sanford Parker.

Black Cross Hotel’s brand-new LP, Hex, is a shivery delight that’s perfect for drawing out creepy and spooky vibes. Each track is a deep dive into the metaphorical underpinnings and outsider perspective baked into the horror genre, and DeEmme (who’s nonbinary) explores cult classics such as The Thing, The Fog, and Halloween II from a queer perspective—a very rich field of inquiry (see also the Queer for Fear documentary series by Hannibal showrunner Bryan Fuller on Shudder). On the album’s grinding first single, “Windows,” the monster of The Thing becomes a sympathetic presence amid chiming guitars and pulsing synths. But sympathy for the hunter turns into empathy with the hunted in “The Fugitive,” with its provocative, chilling buildups, surging hard-rock momentum, and needling, desperate synths. Black Cross Hotel flex their full fury with “138,” a swaggering stadium-size cover of the Misfits’ “We Are 138,” while erie synth waves cradle and support the crunchy metal riffs of “Hitchhiker.” 

It’d be a shame if a debut this self-assured were a one-off, and I was glad to hear this won’t be the last we hear from Black Cross Hotel—the band have said they’ve already written another album’s worth of songs. But for now, we get to celebrate Hex at this record-release party, which features a solid bill of local acts: noise-rock trio Salvation, melodic hardcore quartet Canadian Rifle, and postpunk band Pink Frost, who released an album of their own, Until the Summer Comes, in September.

Black Cross Hotel Salvation, Pink Frost, and Canadian Rifle open. Mon 11/14, 8:30 PM, Empty Bottle, 1035 N. Western, free, 21+


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Chicago’s Black Cross Hotel hex us with their postpunk- and horror-inspired debutMonica Kendrickon November 9, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Looking at 3 realistic needs amidst Justin Fields’ breakout for the Chicago BearsRyan Heckmanon November 9, 2022 at 12:00 pm

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You might never find a more excited NFL fan base in regards to a 3-6 team than the 2022 Chicago Bears fan base right now.

Those words are somewhat hilarious both to write and read, yet they ring true. This season was never going to end with a playoff berth or more wins than losses. In-tune Bears fans knew that all along, and that’s O.K.

But, what fans wanted to know after everything was said and done, this year, was the answer to one question: Is Justin Fields the guy?

Over the past month, Fields has answered that question with a resounding “yes,” and the future suddenly looks exponentially brighter for this franchise under Ryan Poles and Matt Eberflus. Thanks to Fields’ breakout, and a recent record-breaking performance, the Bears offense is now light years ahead of its defense — wait, what?

Justin Fields’ breakout has allowed Chicago Bears fans to look forward with a new perspective.

Before this season, and even just a few weeks ago, most Bears fans would have told you that the focus, next offseason, has to be surrounding Fields with more playmakers and protection. Now, while both can still be true, the cry of desperation doesn’t echo as far.

Fields has taken over, ascending to the number one fantasy football quarterback over the last month. Now, that’s not necessarily saying too much in the real world, but what it does prove is the fact that he’s completely taking over games.

In their last 3 games, Justin Fields and the Chicago Bears offense is averaging:

31.3 Points376.3 Yards0.6 Turnovers55% 3rd Down Conv.Over 34 Min. Time of Possession

— Ryan Heckman (@TheRyanHeckman) November 7, 2022

Fields has proven he can be electrifying. He’s proven he can make plays on his own, but also by getting the ball to his open targets, regardless of their name or status.

This Bears offense is moving the chains, scoring points and looking like a completely different unit over the past month thanks to both Fields and offensive coordinator Luke Getsy working together to use the second-year pro’s strengths.

Now, as we look forward, maybe the Bears don’t have the exact same order of needs in 2023 as they did even a month ago.

With the way Fields has broken out and is currently ascending, where do the Bears’ needs lay? There are three major needs for this roster, and the order in which they’re addressed just might surprise you.

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Looking at 3 realistic needs amidst Justin Fields’ breakout for the Chicago BearsRyan Heckmanon November 9, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »