Onöhsagwë:de’ Cultural Center in Salamanca, New York

Onöhsagwë:de’ Cultural Center in Salamanca, New York

Nestled between the Alleghany River and Alleghany State Park in Western New York’s Southern Tier, is a sprawling museum dedicated to the Seneca-Iroquois Nation. Named after a prominent Seneca singer and teacher, the 33,000 square foot Onöhsagwë:de’ Cultural Center opened in 2018.  Read moreA Guide to The Perfect Bong Joon-ho MarathonThe Seneca Nation, or more…

The Great Performances of 2020

The Great Performances of 2020

As we’ve done every December, we asked the writers of RogerEbert.com to pick a performance they particularly loved from the just-passed year of film. The submissions ranged from the performers who are picking up awards buzz to a group of actors and actresses who may not be getting as much as attention as they deserve. The…

“Sometimes Making Movies Is A Lot About Having Faith” Interview with Dante Lam, Director of THE RESCUE

“Sometimes Making Movies Is A Lot About Having Faith” Interview with Dante Lam, Director of THE RESCUE

Dante Lam‘s follow-up to Operation Red Sea, an invigorating, explosive action showcase that rests as the fourth-highest-grossing ever in China, is an equally exhilarating ensemble action film, The Rescue, one of the many cinematic releases that found itself displaced in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Shifting gears from militaristic bullet ballet to crowd-pleasing Coast Guard…

These Coded Wine Glasses Were Used for Treasonous Toasts

These Coded Wine Glasses Were Used for Treasonous Toasts

This glass has a secret. It’s encoded in the images inscribed around the bowl: a blazing star, an oak leaf, a rose blossom, and two delicate buds sprouting from a thorny stem. They may seem like mere decoration, but to the right eyes, they were a message, and a dangerous one at that. The original…

Official Trailer for ‘The Capote Tapes’ Doc About ‘Answered Prayers’

Official Trailer for ‘The Capote Tapes’ Doc About ‘Answered Prayers’

“‘How could your friend do this to you?’” Altitude Films in the UK has released an official UK trailer for the documentary The Capote Tapes, the feature directorial debut of filmmaker Ebs Burnough. This originally premiered at last year’s Toronto Film Festival, and also played at the Hamptons and Rio de Janeiro Film Festivals. Using…

The ‘Silent Night, Deadly Night’ Franchise Brings Blood to the Yuletide Season

The ‘Silent Night, Deadly Night’ Franchise Brings Blood to the Yuletide Season

Welcome to Carnage Classified, a monthly column where we break down the historical and social influence of all things horror, then rank the films of each month’s category accordingly. Franchises, movements, filmmakers, sub-genres, etc … It’s all here! This entry is about the Silent Night, Deadly Night franchise.  December: the joyous month of holiday cheer….

Queerly Ever After #42: SAVING FACE (2004)

Queerly Ever After #42: SAVING FACE (2004)

Queerly Ever After is a bi-monthly column where I take a look at LGBT+ films that gave their characters a romantic happily-ever-after. There will be spoilers. Also, don’t forget to buy your Queerly Ever After merch right here. Alice Wu‘s feature film debut follows Wilhelmina ‘Wil’ Pang (Michelle Krusiec), a Chinese-American doctor who, while a lesbian,…

The Astonishing Underwater Landscapes Sketched Inside a Diving Bell

The Astonishing Underwater Landscapes Sketched Inside a Diving Bell

This story originally appeared on The Public Domain Review, and is reproduced here under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license. In the late 1860s, Jules Verne’s fictional Captain Nemo cruised the ocean deep, discovering new underwater worlds and creatures. In the same decade, the non-fictional Eugen von Ransonnet-Villez pursued his fascination with zoology by developing…

Why Star Wars Made a Massive Mistake Hiring Patty Jenkins

Why Star Wars Made a Massive Mistake Hiring Patty Jenkins

We’re living in the age of superlatives, yet not enough are heaped upon Jon Favreau. Not only did the writer/director jumpstart the MCU with 2008’s “Iron Man,” he directed the biggest Christmas movie of the modern age, “Elf.” He also wrote and co-starred in the seminal screen bromance “Swingers.” Read moreA Guide to The Perfect…

THE MIDNIGHT SKY: An Intriguing, Yet Underwhelming Sci-Fi Spectacle

THE MIDNIGHT SKY: An Intriguing, Yet Underwhelming Sci-Fi Spectacle

It’s safe to state that George Clooney‘s run as a director has been quite perplexing. The actor has given plenty of noteworthy performances throughout his expansive career, but his attempts at taking the director’s chair have been largely inconsistent, to say the least. His earlier efforts have certainly been more well-received than his later works,…

Dacha Kvitko in Khostinskiy, Russia

Dacha Kvitko in Khostinskiy, Russia

This majestic and beautiful palace stands on a cliff overlooking the Black Sea in Sochi. It originally belonged to a wealthy tsarist colonel, Andrey Valerianovich Kvitko. He had married an Italian woman, whose wealthy family had two big mansions in Italy. Together they moved to a prestigious Khosta area in Sochi, where Kvitko built the…

The Sleepless short film review

The Sleepless short film review

★★★★ Directed by: Kami Sadraei Read moreA Guide to The Perfect Bong Joon-ho MarathonWritten by: Kami Sadraei Starring: Eric Roberts, Kami Sadraei Read moreRobert Stack Finally Solves a Mystery in ‘The Strange and Deadly Occurrence’,,Film Review by: ,,Jason Knight A psychotherapy session. A man is telling the therapist about his issues. But things are not…

Site of the Destroyed Ursuline Convent in Somerville, Massachusetts

Site of the Destroyed Ursuline Convent in Somerville, Massachusetts

In the early 1800s, Boston’s Catholic leadership decided to build a convent on the Ploughed Hill of Charlestown (now Somerville). Starting in 1820, Ursuline sisters ran the convent and its school for girls on the summit, which they renamed Mount Benedict. Read moreA Guide to The Perfect Bong Joon-ho MarathonIn a predominantly Protestant environment, rumors started…

Austrian Archaeological Institute at Athens in Athens, Greece

Austrian Archaeological Institute at Athens in Athens, Greece

Otto Benndorf  was born in 1838 in the Principality of the Reuss Elder Line. As a youth he showed much interest in archaeology and eventually decided to pursue it in his higher education. He held a variety of academic positions over the years and participated in numerous archaeological expeditions in Greece, including in Samothrace (1875),…

LAND Trailer

LAND Trailer

A woman reinvents herself in Land, the feature directorial debut of Robin Wright. Edee couldn’t go on like normal. Nothing was normal, not after the tragedy she’d endured, so she found a remote cabin in Wyoming and set up a new life there. She didn’t anticipate how hard it would be, though, and she quickly found herself…

St. James Hotel in Cimarron, New Mexico

St. James Hotel in Cimarron, New Mexico

Known as the Lambert Inn when it was built in 1872, the St. James Hotel became famous during its Wild West days, when such iconic and notorious figures as Wyatt Earp, Jesse James, Buffalo Bill, and Black Jack Ketchum were patrons. Located on the historic Sante Fe Trail, which Americans traversed as they traveled west, into land…

Original Pizza Hut in Wichita, Kansas

Original Pizza Hut in Wichita, Kansas

The Wichita State University campus is home to a small brick building. It might not look like much but it’s the structure where two brothers, Dan and Frank Carney, started one of the most popular pizza chains in the world.  Read moreA Guide to The Perfect Bong Joon-ho MarathonThe first thing you might notice when…

The 20 Most Interesting New Filmmakers We Met in 2020

The 20 Most Interesting New Filmmakers We Met in 2020

This article is part of our 2020 Rewind. Follow along as we explore the best and most interesting movies, shows, performances, and more from this very strange year. In this entry, we celebrate the most interesting new filmmakers we met in 2020. The narrative of 2020 might dwell on what didn’t happen over the course of the year,…

19 Dazzling Favorite Movies and Reviews from 2020

19 Dazzling Favorite Movies and Reviews from 2020

There are times when I am just dazzled by the reviews or essays contributed by our writers and I can’t wait to discuss them with our editors. We are so fortunate here at RogerEbert.com that it happens often and that we get to share that writing with you. As an end-of-the-year package I asked our editors to do an…

Filmmaker Interview with Stephan P Mitchell

Filmmaker Interview with Stephan P Mitchell

Filmmaker Interview by Chris Olson Your powerful short documentary Deleted is now available to watch. For those who don’t know, what’s the documentary about? Deleted is about the last five hours of a 58 year old man Ahmed Hussein Sidiqi before he becomes homeless due to bureaucratic systems by the Department for Work and Pensions….

9 Movies to Watch if You Like Pixar’s ‘Soul’

9 Movies to Watch if You Like Pixar’s ‘Soul’

Welcome to Movie DNA, a column that recognizes the direct and indirect cinematic roots of both new and classic movies. Learn some film history, become a more well-rounded viewer, and enjoy like-minded works of the past. This entry recommends movies to watch after you see the Pixar animated feature Soul. My young daughter is always asking…