The actors aren't all well cast (I counted only about three I'd consider to be above average for their respective roles — Acker as Beatrice, Fillion (Waitress, White Noise 2) in the supporting role
of Dogberry - the only time the audience I viewed the film with laughed at anything in the film that came from actual dialogue, rather than the injected slapstick and actors occasionally comical facial
expressions, came from Fillion's delivery - and British actor Paul Meston in the minuscule part
of Friar Francis) The rest often appear as though they're reciting lines without any sense
of meaning in the words they are saying, and when one
of those
happens to be the male romantic lead, that's one hell
of a liability.
Through July 6, 2014, two Torpedo Factory photographers — Sandy LeBrun - Evans
of Multiple Exposures Gallery and Jo Ann Tooley — will show their work at Glen Echo's Popcorn Gallery in «Environments: Built and Unbuilt,» a show that highlights what
happens when four local artists are tasked with taking «environmental pictures,» guided by whatever that
expression might
mean to them.