10 Most Heartbreaking Horror Films
Most horror movies want to scare, unsettle, or disturb, but some set their sights even higher. These are the most heartbreaking horror films.
Most horror movies want to scare, unsettle, or disturb, but some set their sights even higher. These are the most heartbreaking horror films.
The first time hearing Van Halen was the first time you held an iPhone, saw a Marvel movie, had an online gaming experience and read a “Harry Potter” book. Maybe add your first love, kiss and movie theater experience. Read moreA Guide to The Perfect Bong Joon-ho MarathonThe sum of all those can’t touch what…
You’re not going to find jello cups on the menu at Alaska Native Medical Center in Anchorage, Alaska. Instead, patients and visitors choose between reindeer pot pie, smoked hooligan, birch sourdough biscuits with fireweed jelly, herring roe, salmon-belly or seal soup, and Eskimo ice cream (made with animal fat, fish oil, and berries). Depending on…
Overlooking New River Gorge, Kaymoor One was one of the biggest of the many coal mines that dot this part of West Virginia. Abandoned in the 1960s, it’s now overrun by vegetation, but accessible to hikers interested in the region’s history. Read moreA Guide to The Perfect Bong Joon-ho MarathonFrom 1900 to 1962, the mine…
In our new column Color Code, Luke Hicks chooses a handful of shots from a favorite film and analyzes them in detail to draw out the meaning behind specific colors and how they play into their scene and the film as a whole. Inspecting color is like inspecting the soul of a film. It’s an endless…
★★★ Directed by: #RenataLitvinova Read moreA Guide to The Perfect Bong Joon-ho MarathonWritten by: #RenataLitvinova Starring: #RenataLitvinova, #SofyaErnst,#AntonShagin Read moreRobert Stack Finally Solves a Mystery in ‘The Strange and Deadly Occurrence’Film Review by Lucy Clarke Director, actress and screenwriter Renata Litivinova’s latest film is caught up in curiosities. The production design breathes and sings with…
During the Meiji Restoration of the late 1800s, the Japanese government sent many students abroad to learn more about Western society to better modernize their home country. Read moreA Guide to The Perfect Bong Joon-ho MarathonOne of the first American schools to accept Japanese students was Rutgers University in New Jersey. Rutgers is rooted in…