Do the Right Thing by Spike Lee is a potent examination of race, morality, and identity in America that skillfully combines tragedy, humor, and urgency to provoke enduring discussion.
Author: Salman Al Farisi (Page 82 of 90)
Lyotard’s postmodernism questions big stories and shows that knowledge and art create different truths instead of a single meaning.
Letters spark a journey through tragedy, truth, and violence in Denis Villeneuve’s eerie tale of family, war, and memory in Incendies.
Adam McKay’s Vice blends political drama with the essay film form, turning Dick Cheney’s rise to power into a sharp, experimental exploration of ambition and control.
Sun Tzu teaches that the highest form of strategy is winning without fighting.
Charlie Kaufman’s I’m Thinking of Ending Things immerses viewers in a surreal exploration of memory, regret, identity, and loneliness, blurring the boundaries between fantasy and reality while confronting the human psyche’s fragility.
The Green Knight reimagines Sir Gawain’s journey as a surreal, symbolic tale of courage, self-discovery, and human imperfection.