A Woman on the Edge of a Nervous Breakdown: Repulsion by Jeremy Carr

A Book Review by Dávid Szőke. A fascinating study that examines themes mostly, but not exclusively, central to feminist visual representations, without losing sight of the paradoxes that shade contemporary approaches to Polanski’s work in the light of the #meToo movement.” “We are clay […] and nothing is real for […]

Broken Windows: Decline and Reimagination in Cinematic New York

A Book Review by John Talbird. A sound, focused, and thorough examination of a fairly compressed period of time.” On October 30, 1975, New York’s Daily News ran an article with the banner headline, “Ford to City: Drop Dead.” Of course, President Gerald Ford never said such a thing, few […]

The Other Side: An Interview with Sophie Linnenbaum on The Ordinaries

By Yun-hua Chen. We wanted to lean into this classic world of superheroes and create this contrast between the supposed superhero and the ordinaries, which is what this film is about – what is ordinary, what is special? And we try to bring these elements together in this title.” –Sophie […]

Fame with a Tarnish: Mickey Reece’s Country Gold (2022)

By Jonathan Monovich. Chips away at complex meaning and eventually strikes it, despite the occasional distracting surrealism.” Country Gold begins in a reverse Wizard of Oz fashion, transitioning from color to black-and-white. The story starts with Troyal Brux (Mickey Reece), a playful take on Garth Brooks, professing his idolization of […]

Approaching the Unknowable “Others” – Comic Drunks, Crazy Cults, and Lovable Monsters: Bad Behavior on American Television

A Book Review by M. Sellers Johnson. While Diffrient advances contemporary television scholarship…readers will also find this book to be light, entertaining, and likely relatable to modern TV consumers’ apparent affinity for dubious moral ethics.” Within our televised small screens and the world they inhabit, bad behavior persists in social […]

Low Cost, High Reward – Blumhouse Productions: The New House of Horror

A Book Review by Thomas M. Puhr. It’s this nebulous balancing act between artistic risk and bottom-line business that makes such companies so fascinating, and books like this one so illuminating.” Not a week seems to go by without a new horror movie bearing the Blumhouse logo making the rounds, […]