The Politics of the Planet of the Apes
By drawing on SF tropes and the legacy of a genre classic, the new "Apes" trilogy ambitiously reflects the crisis of the left in this age of impotence.
"There is only one thing that can kill the Movies, and that is education." — Will Rogers
By drawing on SF tropes and the legacy of a genre classic, the new "Apes" trilogy ambitiously reflects the crisis of the left in this age of impotence.
Dan Hassler-ForestAug 26, 2017
Gregg LaGambina talks to Alejandro Jodorowsky about his new movie, "Endless Poetry."
Gregg LaGambinaAug 25, 2017
How does Christopher Nolan's "Dunkirk" differ from earlier on-screen iterations of the evacuation?
Jerome ChristensenAug 18, 2017
Holly Willis surveys three new books about what it means to be post-cinema.
Holly WillisAug 13, 2017
Emmanuel Ordóñez Angulo on what Alejandro González Iñárritu's VR installation "Carne y Arena" could teach us about suffering.
Emmanuel Ordóñez AnguloAug 11, 2017
Simon Schatzberg interviews Charles Fairbanks about “The Modern Jungle,” his documentary portrait of modern life in an indigenous Zoque community in Mexico.
Simon SchatzbergAug 2, 2017
How does one maintain a self when losing an other who is also one's “self”?
Ara OsterweilJul 27, 2017
The Sea Islands might seem like a small place. But every point in diaspora is the cutting edge if you have the nerve to touch it.
Carina del Valle SchorskeJul 21, 2017
"The Beguiled" is a movie about bored white women in rigorous pursuit of fantasy.
Sam HuberJul 14, 2017
The Celluloid Liberation Front on Oliver Stone's "The Putin Interviews" and how it feeds the myth of Vladimir Putin.
Celluloid Liberation FrontJul 13, 2017
Nicholas de Villiers new book gives a fresh view on films about sex work by focusing on documentaries about sex workers, a genre that he calls “sexography.”
Theresa AnastiJul 6, 2017
J. D. Connor on "War Machine" and the cult of the warrior-scholar.
J. D. ConnorJun 29, 2017