In his video review of Christopher Nolan’s “The Odyssey,” the Canadian artist and philosopher of myth Jonathan Pageau expressed what a lot of us who are committed to the old books have been feeling for over a year: a trepidation that our favorite director might fail to capture the magic of our favorite book (well, second-favorite for me). After disasters like “Troy,” I had sworn off all Hollywood adaptations of ancient classics. If you spend hours every day, every week, for years just trying to get to the point where you can hear a little bit of the magic of the literature of the deep past, then you worry about those who might try to turn your beloved stories into old-fashioned summer action flicks and thus “taint” them, to use Pageau’s term.
Meet Britain’s first Catholic prime minister in 500 years
Britain is about to get its first Catholic prime minister in more than 500 years. No Roman Catholic has occupied the role of chief minister to the English crown since the 1550s, when Queen Mary I attempted to reverse the English Reformation that had begun during the reign of her father, Henry VIII. That is set to change with the elevation of Andy Burnham on July 20.