RaMell Ross’s drama—a remarkable one, about institutions, Black male friendship, social mimicry, and the Black political ...
The sociologist Musa al-Gharbi argues that the “Great Awokening” alienated “normie voters,” making it difficult for Kamala ...
Thanks to the maneuverings of the tiny nation of Vanuatu, the entire industrialized world is effectively on trial in The ...
Holy happy trail, Batman!” Stephen Colbert enthused, over an en-plein-air portrait of a shirtless and beaming Luigi Mangione, ...
Marielle Heller’s adaptation of Rachel Yoder’s novel, starring Amy Adams, omits most of the protagonist’s inner life and ...
The Brutalist,” the director’s nearly four-hour study of immigration, identity, and marriage, flowed from his own struggle to ...
A new kind of prosthetic limb depends on carbon fibre and computer chips—and the reëngineering of muscles, tendons, and bone.
Health insurers and hospitals increasingly treat patients less as humans in need of care than consumers who generate profit.
The family members regularly break into impressively harmonized, Osmond-family-level carol arrangements that they’ve clearly ...
In his early prose narrative, “Monsieur Teste,” the great French poet created an alter ego even more aloof and elusive than ...
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The Criterion Channel, the foremost moveable source for art-house and repertory cinema, thrillingly expands its offerings ...