• Diane Lane and Kevin Costner Headline Our Pick of the Week

    Streaming might be the future, but physical media is still the present. It’s also awesome, depending on the title, the label, and the release, so each week we take a look at the new Blu-rays and DVDs making their way into the world. Welcome to this week in Home Video for February 2nd, 2021! This week’s…

  • The Battle to Bottle Palm Wine

    It’s a common sight in tropical places from Nigeria to India to the Philippines. In the mornings, before the harsh sun has burned the mist away, tappers climb the palm trees. Aided with nothing more than wiry muscles and woven rope or cloth, they scale to the top, risking the steep drop to collect palm…

  • SUNDANCE 2021: ONE FOR THE ROAD

    Nattawut “Baz” Poonpiriya‘s sophomore feature Bad Genius — a high school heist thriller, which was also the highest-grossing Thai film of 2017 — was deemed as one of the best films ever made in its original country. Now, 4 years later, he follows it up with One for the Road, a stylish and affecting road-trip…

  • THE LITTLE THINGS: A Discombobulated Decent Into Darkness

    Is there a star as consistently reliable as Denzel Washington? In today’s age, the currency of movie-stars seems to be falling — Say it ain’t so! — as IP brands take center stage. And yet, Washington has remained arguably our most endearing star, the kind of presence at the movies who can sell a project just on his name…

  • Bateshwar Temple Complex in Morena, India

    The Bateshwar collection of Hindu temples is believed to have been constructed between the 8th and 10th-centuries by the Gurjara-Pratihara dynasty. Little is known about their construction, as once this empire fell, the temples too disappeared from the history books and were swallowed up by the jungle. They were re-discovered by British archeologist Alexander Cunningham…

  • Philadelphia’s ‘Building Ghosts’ Have a Lot to Say

    Molly Lester was walking around north Philadelphia a few years ago when she saw a ghost. The specter was haunting the alabaster remains of 1513 North Second Street, a former townhouse. Lester took a picture, the first of what has become a spirited collection of Philly building ghosts—the imprints of demolished rowhouses that linger on…

  • Freshlist’s Seasonal Produce Clock in Charlotte, North Carolina

    Designed to highlight the agricultural diversity of the Piedmont region of the Carolinas throughout the year, this seasonal produce clock was completed in 2020. Read moreA Guide to The Perfect Bong Joon-ho MarathonMeasuring nearly 12 feet in diameter, the installation features a custom-built clock hand that makes one full rotation per year. With 12 o’clock…

  • Circus Showfolks of America Memorial in Daly City, California

    Colma, California is often known as San Francisco’s City of the Dead. Olivet Memorial Park is one of the 17 cemeteries located in Colma and within its grounds lies a clown cemetery. Read moreA Guide to The Perfect Bong Joon-ho MarathonShowfolks are buried all over the United States. The largest Showmen’s memorial resides in Indiana…

  • Sacrifice film review

    ★★ Directed by #AndyCollier #ToorMian Read moreA Guide to The Perfect Bong Joon-ho MarathonWritten by #AndyCollier #ToorMian #PaulKane Starring #BarbaraCrampton #SophiaStevens Read moreRobert Stack Finally Solves a Mystery in ‘The Strange and Deadly Occurrence’Film Review by Brandon Thomas If we’ve learned anything from horror cinema over the decades, it’s that Europe is a scary place…

  • All the Horror You Need to Stream in February 2021

    Welcome to Horrorscope, a monthly column keeping horror nerds and initiates up to date on all the genre content coming to and leaving from your favorite streaming services. Here’s a guide to all the essential horror streaming in February 2021. Smell that? Love is in the air. A love…of horror, that is! Read moreA Guide…

  • #399 February 2, 2021

    Matt writes: The Roger and Chaz Ebert Foundation is joining the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum and the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Foundation in presenting the inaugural No Malice Film Contest for Illinois youth and young adults. Young filmmakers between the ages of 11 and 21 are invited to create short films that explore and promote racial healing. Cash…

  • The Enduring Haute Couture of a 466-Year Old Kimono House

    When Yozaemon Chikiriya established his garment business, Chiso, in Kyoto, his primary customers were monks who required fine clerical vestments. That was 1555. More than four centuries later, the company’s intricately cut robes are coveted as luxury garments, and Chiso—having persevered through shrinking economies, shifting trends, wars, and more—has found itself among the last of…

  • London’s Retired Tube Trains Live on an Island

    Though it lies just a few miles off England’s southern coast, the curious, diamond-shaped Isle of Wight seems to exist in another era entirely. Once a beloved vacation destination for Victorian visitors, the island – still reachable only by boat from the mainland—remains a British family holiday favorite that capitalizes on the kitschy seaside charm…

  • ‘The Reckoning’ Commits the Worst Horror Movie Sin

    It must be frightening to shoot another horror movie after “The Descent.” The cave-dwelling shocker stands as one of the best thrillers of the 21st century. Director Neil Marshall hasn’t fully gone back to the horror well since, dabbling in period thrills (“Centurion”), HBO glory (“Game of Thrones”) and IP reboots (“Hellboy”). Read moreA Guide…

  • Watch: Award-Winning Swiss Animated Short Film ‘The Lonely Orbit’

    Loneliness… we all experience it, we all dread it. And it’s especially tough now with the pandemic, everyone separated at home. This beautiful animated short film from Switzerland called The Lonely Orbit is about loneliness and everyone’s eternal struggle with it. The filmmakers visualize this powerful feeling following a satellite drifting in orbit quietly, lonely,…

  • Sundance 2021 Report 1: CRYPTOZOO, JOHN AND THE HOLE & KNOCKING

    It’s another year, and that means another Sundance Film Festival! While none of us are having the experience we truly crave, indulging in the atmosphere and ambiance of Park City, there’s still enjoyment to be had, and plenty of movies to devour. I think it’s worth a real round of applause to Sundance for what…

  • SUNDANCE 2021: CODA

    There aren’t many groundbreaking elements in Siân Heder‘s sophomore feature CODA. It’s a movie, part coming-of-age and part family drama, which leans heavily toward the archetype of the subgenre. And yet, in spite of all the familiarity, Heder finds a way to make the movie engaging from start to finish. Her direction, though never flashy,…