Tag: Diversity

  • ‘The Half of it’ Handles its Presented Social Issues Thoughtfully

    ‘The Half of it’ Handles its Presented Social Issues Thoughtfully

    The social issues The Half of it takes on are handled well, between the antagonization brought on to Ellie for her race and the conflict that arises from her being gay. Both aspects of her character are built up over the course of the film and don’t seem abrupt or rushed. The film shows racism…

  • Why DEH should have Gone POC

    Why DEH should have Gone POC

    The gentle, emotional nuances of Evan’s coming-of-age story would have been so beneficial to have incorporated into the life of a POC character. Showing a Black, Asian or Latino young man that is afforded the space to be vulnerable, flawed and sensitive while driving a compelling and widely-loved narrative would have been a game changer.

  • Dead Poets Society Steals a Queer Story

    Dead Poets Society Steals a Queer Story

    Dead Poets Society relies on patriarchal tropes such as overbearing fathers, contrived brotherhood, and faux-individuality in order to portray its straight white male characters as oppressed.

  • HBO Max: The Best Movies and TV Shows for Diversity

    HBO Max: The Best Movies and TV Shows for Diversity

    Whether you like cinema classics, sketch comedy, or science fiction, HBO Max has something for you! Check out our top picks for diversity and representation.

  • ‘Army of the Dead’ is Meh Enough Without the Forced Representation

    ‘Army of the Dead’ is Meh Enough Without the Forced Representation

    Even now, the well-established Snyder has yet to learn this as he continues to allow misguided decisions to convince him that his projects hold the same kind of intelligent and emotional weight. Army of the Dead is a tonal mess, one that never decides what it’s trying to be, and, for all we know, doesn’t…

  • Holier than Thou Hypocrisy, as Seen in ‘Yes, God Yes’

    Holier than Thou Hypocrisy, as Seen in ‘Yes, God Yes’

    ‘Yes, God, Yes (2019)’ is a coming-of-age tale about a Christian teenage girl discovering her sexuality, the turbulence that comes with it from within herself, and the judgment from those around her.

  • ‘The Djinn’ Movie Review

    ‘The Djinn’ Movie Review

    The Djinn is about childhood traumas and lifestyle changes. It tells the story of Dylan (Ezra Dewey), a mute boy who blames himself for his mom’s death. He also condemns himself for being speech-impaired, and he thinks that if he did not have that condition, everything could had been different.

  • ‘Oxygen’: Mélanie Laurent Helps Elevate a Familiar Premise

    ‘Oxygen’: Mélanie Laurent Helps Elevate a Familiar Premise

    These confines won’t really encourage you to read the film as a metaphor for the nerve-inducing experience we’ve all been through over the last year, however — and in the interest of maintaining your dignity, you probably shouldn’t. While the sociopolitical commentary may have worked for the similarly-themed Buried (2010), in which we find Ryan…

  • Fall in Love With Anna Biller’s ‘The Love Witch’

    Fall in Love With Anna Biller’s ‘The Love Witch’

    “I’m always interested in exploring female fantasy, and the sexy witch is a loaded archetype that is simultaneously about men’s fears and fantasies about women, and women’s feelings of empowerment and agency. So whereas we are used to seeing the sexy witch or the femme fatale from the outside, I wanted to explore her from…

  • In the Long Run, the Answer To COVID Hangover.

    In the Long Run, the Answer To COVID Hangover.

    A few episodes in, I realized the most prominent theme of In The Long Run wasn’t culture, race or even finding independence–but the idea of belonging.