Arts
Slamdance Film Review: After America
Starring real-life criminal justice deescalation workers, After America is so becoming of its drab setting it is barely memorable. … read more
Film Review: The World To Come
The World to Come explores the question of how one deals with the realities of life versus the expectations of what it’s supposed to be. … read more
Slamdance Film Review: A Family
A Family offers its audience more than enough to chew on with a deep, emotionally sensitive reflection on family and trauma. … read more
Slamdance Film Review: Bad Attitude: The Art of Spain Rodriguez
Bad Attitude: The Art of Spain Rodriguez offers a well-rounded look into the evolution of Spain and how that impacted the world around him. … read more
Slamdance Film Review: The Sleeping Negro
Despite attempts to engage in a pressing dialogue, The Sleeping Negro reads as a bunch of ideas—full of potential, but starving for nuance. … read more
Film Review: The Mauritanian
The Mauritanian conveys when we talk ourselves into believing that the end justifies the means, we inevitably lose sight of the end itself. … read more
Film Review: Minari
Minari is an emotional and lyrical work of art, and a moving portrait of assimilation and the immigrant experience. … read more
Film Review: Malcolm & Marie
It’s difficult to imagine anyone but people who really like Zendaya and John David Washington making it through Malcolm & Marie. … read more
Film Review: Nomadland
Nomadland is an immersive, cleansing experience that had me captivated from beginning to end, and it’s deserving of the love it’s getting. … read more
Content Shifter: 9 Cyberpunk Movies to Stream
Here are nine cyberpunk movies from the 1990s that you should stream that predicted The Future, both boldly and brainlessly. … read more