Tag: Women

  • ‘Jack and Diane’ Review: Wasted Potential

    ‘Jack and Diane’ Review: Wasted Potential

    The plot could’ve really been interesting if the elements of lycanthropy was integrated with perhaps the struggle of identity of being LGBTQ+. It’s an experience for so many that as they’re starting to realizing their true selves, they feel like a monster, especially if they come from unsupportive homes or communities. Instead, the horror and transformation elements…

  • What Netflix’s “Shadow and Bone” Gets Right and Wrong with the Books’ Diversity

    What Netflix’s “Shadow and Bone” Gets Right and Wrong with the Books’ Diversity

    Netflix’s Shadow and Bone has a complicated relationship with race. It has a diverse cast, but not without its problems. Based on Leigh Bardugo’s two book series, the show features characters from the Shadow and Bone trilogy, which is very straight and white, and the Six of Crows duology, which is much more diverse. When bringing…

  • Young Adult Matters Review: A Well Performed, but Self-Indulgent Runaway Teen Flick

    Young Adult Matters Review: A Well Performed, but Self-Indulgent Runaway Teen Flick

    Movie explained – Despite the glaring flaws present, Young Adult Matters is held together by the performances from Yoo Mi and Hani, who keep the story afloat. Though an interesting story, Young Adult Matters is worth watching solely for these performances. Among its brilliant performances is a messy, self-indulgent, and at times overwhelmingly brutal story…

  • The Woman in the Window is a Poor Attempt at an Intriguing Story

    The Woman in the Window is a Poor Attempt at an Intriguing Story

    Mild spoilers for The Woman in the Window ahead. The Woman in the Window is a recently released Netflix film starring Amy Adams, Gary Oldman, and Julianne Moore, among a few other big names. The film follows Anna (Adams), an agoraphobic woman who begins suspecting that something is wrong with her neighbors across the street.…

  • Reclaiming Her Body: “Jennifer’s Body” & Why We Need Diverse Storytellers

    Reclaiming Her Body: “Jennifer’s Body” & Why We Need Diverse Storytellers

    The height of subversive horror cinema is Jennifer’s Body. No, I will never budge on that. Yes, Cabin in The Woods is funny, Scream is very well made, and the Scary Movie franchise is …. there. But nothing is quite as satisfying as watching the teenage succubus that is Jennifer Check rip apart boys. In…

  • “Coven of Sisters”: Church vs. Women

    “Coven of Sisters”: Church vs. Women

    Witch trials were a widespread phenomenon in Europe and North America between the XVI and XIX centuries. Despite how ridiculous it may sound, a lot of people were condemned to death accused of witchery, especially women. The Holy Inquisition had opened a total of 125,000 processes during those years, and at least 59 people were…

  • How Subtle is Too Subtle in ‘Nomadland’?

    How Subtle is Too Subtle in ‘Nomadland’?

    Minor Spoilers Ahead They say home is where the heart is, and Nomadland is all heart…if you project onto it, at least. Following a woman living in her van going from one temporary, minimum-wage job to the next, the film gives some insight into a world often hidden from the on-screen due to its often…

  • How ‘Billie Eilish: The World’s a Little Blurry’ Humanizes Child Stars

    How ‘Billie Eilish: The World’s a Little Blurry’ Humanizes Child Stars

    When they’re young, they’re America’s darlings but, when they become teens and adolescents, they’re instantly perceived as harbingers of immorality. They’re Lindsay Lohan, Macaulay Culkin, Justin Bieber, and Britney Spears. But, despite what many media outlets, politicians, and the general public may think, they are human beings above anything else. The new Billie Eilish documentary,…

  • The Invitation (2015): Grief is on The Menu

    The Invitation (2015): Grief is on The Menu

    The Invitation takes a creeping look at two simple premises: reuniting with forgotten friends and new-age spiritualism. Though one seems a bit scarier than the other, the film heightens social awkwardness to a macabre level that puts an uncomfortable look on when the social taboo of grief is put on public display.

  • Reflecting on ‘The United States vs. Billie Holiday’

    Reflecting on ‘The United States vs. Billie Holiday’

    Lee Daniels’s Billie Holiday biopic The United States vs. Billie Holiday was released on February 26th, 2021, and my immediate reaction to it was one of discomfort.