TV
As it stands, episode one of Allen v. Farrow does not provide us with anything new or substantial that may change the outcome of the case.
For this video roundtable, our team talks about their favorite film/tv couples!
While this week’s episode was pretty average, it had a joyful, educational maxi-challenge and a sad departure from an amazing queen.
While at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival, Wilson Kwong spoke with Marianne Rendón and Adam Brooks about their new film These Days.
Cobra Kai may look like a series leaning heavily on nostalgia and cheesy drama but deep down, it is a humane portrayal of one’s journey to redemption.
Despite its many strengths and successes, Education was the only Small Axe film that left me wanting more.
Alex Wheatle is yet another strong showing from Steve McQueen and company, and one that feels more personal than the rest.
The Queen’s Gambit is stunning and exhilaratingly enjoyable, but it ultimately leaves me as a viewer just wanting more of it as a whole.
With fall TV in full swing, Jesse talks with guests about three of the season’s most talked-about series.
Fargo feels monotone as it’s too busy delivering speeches instead of creating compelling arguments about the timeless topics it wants to tackle.
Mike Flanagan’s The Haunting of Bly Manor once again sees him revisiting an old horror text as a roadmap to explore human emotions.
What Pen15 has done is pave the way for more nuanced Asian or Asian-American-centered stories to be normalized onscreen.
The series Cobra Kai falls in the category of doing nostalgia right, combining both elemnts of the films of the 1980s while also remaining fresh.
Agents of Chaos is an incredibly rich examination of the most pressing concern around the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election.