The Piano addresses racial tensions in a more nuanced manner than it does gender politics.
Category: Cinema (Page 6 of 37)
Restricted solely to the confines of a fictitious late-night talk show segment from the 1970s, Late Night with the Devil attempts an audacious coup to connect idea to performance.
The common stereotype of the “Impossible White Man” usually depicts a white male protagonist who is exceedingly gifted, extremely clever, or extraordinarily fortunate, and who consistently succeeds.
Immaculate combines modern commentary on women’s autonomy with nostalgia.
Although it’s simple to categorize Fish Tank as a “typical British film,” the film shows viewers who are less fortunate than most of us.
In his composition Civil War, writer-director Alex Garland shows how the United States is enmeshed in a war with numerous rebel groups that are ferociously engaged in an effort to topple the government.
Critics have hailed Call Me by Your Name as a daring subversion of the coming-of-age genre.