ReGEN Haus in Fillmore, California

ReGEN Haus in Fillmore, California

The little town of Fillmore is known for its authentic steam train rides and this unique curiosity shop that also happens to have a bakery.  Across from city hall is a classic 1900s bungalow that is home to various industrial treasures. Visitors to this curiosity shop will find a collection of carefully displayed objects that…

“Cottage” Gas Station in Ottawa, Ontario

“Cottage” Gas Station in Ottawa, Ontario

Constructed in 1934, this small service station is an architectural rarity. American architect Carl-August Petersen designed the building in the Tudor Revival style. The rounded doorways and windows, steeply-pitched roofs, and chimneys are similar to those found on old English cottages and homes in the surrounding Island Park neighborhood.  It served as one of Ottawa’s first…

What’s New to Stream on Netflix for February 2021

What’s New to Stream on Netflix for February 2021

Crossing the Streams is our monthly look at all the offerings hitting the big streaming services each month, and this time we’re checking out the new Netflix arrivals for February 2021. This month’s titles include a disappointing shortage of older, non-Netflix movies, but we’re also getting new films starring Rosamund Pike, Zendaya, and more! Keep…

Why All Movie Lovers Need to Watch ‘Cinema Paradiso’

Why All Movie Lovers Need to Watch ‘Cinema Paradiso’

The disconnect between movies and reality is unavoidable. Contrary to what we assume from films like “The Breakfast Club,” life offers few fist-raising moments like Judd Nelson’s triumphant scene in that John Hughes classic. For this reason, the 1988 Italian film “Cinema Paradiso,” a movie which says, “Life isn’t like it is in the movies….

Enter the Lair of an Enormous, Ancient, Predatory Worm

Enter the Lair of an Enormous, Ancient, Predatory Worm

More than 20 million years ago, off the coast of what is now northern Taiwan, a marine creature tunneled vertically in the seafloor sand, then veered to the side. Every now and then, the animal—probably a skinny, sprawling, ancient worm—jutted its head above the sediment, snatched some prey, and dragged the unwitting morsel into its…

Sundance 2021: Interview With Director Maisie Crow Of AT THE READY

Sundance 2021: Interview With Director Maisie Crow Of AT THE READY

Border control in the United States has been a topic that often triggers heated discussions in recent years. Fuelled by a (former) president who constantly incited hateful ideologies in his public remarks, any discourse on the subject often feels highly politicized. In Maisie Crow‘s At the Ready, political messaging takes a backseat to the much more…

Where to Watch the Movies of the 2021 Sundance Film Festival

Where to Watch the Movies of the 2021 Sundance Film Festival

Congratulations to the Sundance Institute for a successful virtual film festival with a near-impeccable screener platform. We can’t wait to get back to seeing films on the big screen in Park City, but if we ever have to do this thing remotely again, we know we’ll be in good hands. The special circumstances of the…

The 17-Year Cicada Swarms of Brood X Are Coming This Summer

The 17-Year Cicada Swarms of Brood X Are Coming This Summer

This story was originally published in The Guardian and appears here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration. Billions of cicadas that have spent 17 years underground are set to emerge across large areas of the eastern United States, bringing swarming numbers and loud mating calls to major towns and cities. The periodic cicadas—bugs with…

Sundance 2021: ON THE COUNT OF THREE

Sundance 2021: ON THE COUNT OF THREE

(trigger warnings: suicide, depression, suicidal thoughts, trauma, assault.) There’s one moment in Jerrod Carmichael‘s directorial debut, the dark bromance comedy On the Count of Three, where one character utters a line that will undoubtedly resonate with everyone who’s had suicidal thoughts before. “Not waking up tomorrow,” he says. “It’s the most beautiful thought I’ve had…

Sundance 2021: The Sparks Brothers, Amy Tan: Unintended Memoir, Rita Moreno: Just A Girl Who Decided to Go For It, Ailey

Sundance 2021: The Sparks Brothers, Amy Tan: Unintended Memoir, Rita Moreno: Just A Girl Who Decided to Go For It, Ailey

Edgar Wright really wants you to listen to the music of Russell and Ron Mael, also known as Sparks. And instead of just recommending a song, or making a playlist, he’s assembled “The Sparks Brothers,” a 140-minute tribute to the brotherly duo’s long career. Wright has brought in a group of famous faces to show just how well-known they are by…

Sundance 2021: MARVELOUS AND THE BLACK HOLE and LAND

Sundance 2021: MARVELOUS AND THE BLACK HOLE and LAND

The following two reviews come from first time feature film directors, which seems to be a trend at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. Both Marvelous and the Black Hole and Land capture the intricacies of grief, with Kate Tsang and Robin Wright, respectively, tackling rather difficult subject matter in very different ways. There isn’t one…

Funivia del Colle (Kohlerer Bahn) in Bolzano, Italy

Funivia del Colle (Kohlerer Bahn) in Bolzano, Italy

Funivia del Colle (Kohlerer Bahn) is an aerial lift connecting the city of Bolzano with nearby Monte Pozza, known locally as Colle. The lift starts at an elevation of about 853 feet (260 meters) and reaches the village of Colle di Villa at an elevation of over 3,000 feet (1,100 meters). The trip takes a…

Feuermelder in Berlin, Germany

Feuermelder in Berlin, Germany

Outside the Schloss Bellevue stands a red pillar that many confuse with a postbox. The pillar is actually a feuermelder, essentially a public fire alarm station. These old fire alarms date back to a time when having a landline inside your house was considered a luxury. These stations were utilized by the public to quickly summon help to…

Witch’s Hat Pavilion in Reading, Pennsylvania

Witch’s Hat Pavilion in Reading, Pennsylvania

Although now the site of hiking trails open to the public, Neversink Mountain in Reading, Pennsylvania, was once the site of a complex of exclusive hotels. In warm months, wealthy vacationers arrived from New York and Philadelphia by a train that went right up the hillside, drawn by the prospect of escaping summer in the city…

FRENCH EXIT Trailer

FRENCH EXIT Trailer

A family must adjust to a new life in French Exit, the latest from director Azazel Jacobs. The film follows Frances and Malcolm Price, a previously wealthy mother and son who have burned through the family inheritance. They’re so low on funds that they take an offer to stay at a small apartment in Paris, but…

The Dazzling Robin Williams Role We Missed

The Dazzling Robin Williams Role We Missed

Great performances are worth seeking out in great movies, obviously, but what about bad ones? Would you watch a lousy movie in order to witness a single, stellar performance? Is it worth our time, for example, to revisit “The Lonely Bones” to see Stanley Tucci’s justifiably Oscar-nominated work in Peter Jackson’s failure of a literary…

What Does the Title ‘Esquire’ Mean, Anyway?

What Does the Title ‘Esquire’ Mean, Anyway?

The minor debate over First Lady Dr. Jill Biden’s title, which came up shortly after her husband’s election, may seem completely ridiculous and insulting, which it is, but it’s also the latest in a line of kerfuffles relating to how people in power in the United States present themselves. The extensive intricacies of British titling,…

Sundance 2021 Report 2: HOW IT ENDS, EIGHT FOR SILVER & MAYDAY

Sundance 2021 Report 2: HOW IT ENDS, EIGHT FOR SILVER & MAYDAY

With my second report at this year’s virtual Sundance Film Festival, I found myself even more impressed than I had been so far. All three of the films resonated in different ways, generally combining awe, curiosity, and a sense of fulfillment. As always, thank you, creators and festival runners, for instilling the power of film….

Sundance 2021: Cusp, Street Gang, Philly D.A.

Sundance 2021: Cusp, Street Gang, Philly D.A.

One of the best films of this year’s Sundance Film Festival was also one of its most controversial, the haunting and powerful “Cusp” from directors Parker Hill and Isabel Bethencourt, who won an award on Tuesday night from the jury for Emerging Filmmaker. “Cusp” is a tough watch, a film about how difficult it is…

Sundance 2021: R#J and FIRST DATE

Sundance 2021: R#J and FIRST DATE

There’s never any shortage of new talent to be discovered at Sundance, and that is certainly the case again for this year’s edition of the festival. In addition to showcasing features from 38 first time directors, the 2021 edition of the Sundance Film Festival continues to rally behind bold and innovative creative choices that push…

SUNDANCE 2021: CENSOR

SUNDANCE 2021: CENSOR

The year is 1985, and the rise of video nasties — the bloody and gory low-budget horrors distributed in the form of VHS — has created a moral panic and public hysteria in the UK. The right-wing and parent groups believe that such films (as ridiculous as this sounds) are the main reason why the…

Tower Bridge in Sacramento, California

Tower Bridge in Sacramento, California

While it’s hard not to miss this bright, golden structure while speeding by on US 50, it’s what visitors don’t see that makes this bridge unique. Constructed in 1935, the center section of this bridge lifts 100 feet above the Sacramento River, allowing large watercraft to pass below. Unlike typical vertical lift bridges, the towers…

Njupeskärs Vattenfall in Älvdalen S, Sweden

Njupeskärs Vattenfall in Älvdalen S, Sweden

Being home to “the “largest” anything in a country can be a great honor for locals and a boom for tourism. The Njupeskär waterfall is one such place and is one of the more popular attractions in the region. Thousands of people visit the falls each year and many trails lead to the top. Its beauty…

GODZILLA VS. KONG Trailer

GODZILLA VS. KONG Trailer

It’s a heavyweight title match in Godzilla vs. Kong, the latest in the ever-growing Monsterverse. I think the title covers the plot. It’s Godzilla. Versus Kong. A battle between the giant ape and the sea monster, two icons of the big screen. It’s what Legendary has been building towards since starting this shared universe, and considering…

The Praying Shell in Bolton-le-Sands, England

The Praying Shell in Bolton-le-Sands, England

Often mistaken as a commemorative statue, this sculpture has become a memorial of sorts, honoring the deaths of 23 Chinese cockle pickers who died in Morecambe Bay working for criminal organizations. The sculpture was actually imagined before the tragedy occurred in 2004.  Unveiled in November 2013 and carved out of limestone, “The Praying Shell” overlooks…

Orchard Heritage Park in Sunnyvale, California

Orchard Heritage Park in Sunnyvale, California

Sunnyvale, a Silicon-Valley city chockablock with tech and aerospace companies, once looked very different. Stone fruit orchards once covered its landscape and employed its citizens, and old-timers still speak fondly of oceans of pink-and-white flowers in the springtime and the summer fruit stands selling sweet apricots and cherries. There aren’t too many orchards left. But…

The Portland Observatory in Portland, Maine

The Portland Observatory in Portland, Maine

What could be mistaken as a lighthouse, the Portland Observatory was built in 1807 by Captain Lemuel Moody to serve as a communication station for Portland Harbor. The Portland Observatory was one of the earliest marine signal stations in the United States and the only one still standing today. It was a commercial venture designed…

The Wanting Mare film review

The Wanting Mare film review

★★★ Directed by #NicholasAsheBateman Written by #NicholasAsheBateman Starring #JordanMonaghan #NicholasAsheBateman Film Review by Hope Madden Light on plot, heavy on atmosphere, Nicholas Ashe Bateman’s feature debut drops us in a distant post-apocalypse. Here, those trapped on a sparsely populated island of dust and heat dream of boarding the once-yearly barge that transports the island’s wild…