Tag: Diversity

  • ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ Review: Yes, I’m Still Team Kong

    ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ Review: Yes, I’m Still Team Kong

    Kong bows to no one. The latest MonsterVerse film is the highly anticipated Godzilla vs. Kong. Directed by Adam Wingard and written by Eric Pearson and Max Borenstein, the movie follows the two most dominant alpha monsters on the planet as they clash with one another. Who will come out on top? Who will bow to the other? Or, is…

  • Three Moments in “The Star-Spangled Man” That Aren’t Being Talked About Enough

    Three Moments in “The Star-Spangled Man” That Aren’t Being Talked About Enough

    This past Friday, Disney+, and Marvel released the second episode of their new original mini-series, The Falcon and The Winter Soldier. Directed by Kari Skogland and written by Michael Kastelein, this is the first to see Sam (Anthony Mackie) and Bucky (Sebastian Stan) battling together. With the announcement of John Walker (Wyatt Russell) as the new Captain America (ugh)…

  • “The United States Vs. Billie Holiday” Dilutes Lady Day

    “The United States Vs. Billie Holiday” Dilutes Lady Day

    As the title suggests, this film depicts a heartbreaking battle: governmental abuse against the Black Civil Rights movement in the wake of Lady Day’s song “Strange Fruit”. The telling of her story through the eyes of Lee Daniels lends a more artistic tone than biographical one- but the nature of her legacy rings true- despite…

  • Validating Bimbos & Erin Brockovich

    Validating Bimbos & Erin Brockovich

    Unless you’re on the wrong side of Tik Tok, aka Straight Tik Tok, you definitely have seen the growing popularity and comeback of the Bimbo trend  -  now extending to the gender-inclusive Himbo, Bimbo, and Thembo. It has been reclaimed as a feminist concept, as a way to praise femininity, subvert the male gaze, and…

  • ‘Monsoon’ Review: Hazy Memories of Home

    ‘Monsoon’ Review: Hazy Memories of Home

    A moving tale, Monsoon follows Kit (Henry Golding) as he returns home to Saigon, Vietnam. After his family fled to England after the Vietnam war when he was six, Kit hasn’t looked back. However, after the loss of both of his parents, Kit heads back to Saigon thirty years later not only to scatter their ashes, but…

  • Comedies From Around the World (And Where to Stream Them)

    Comedies From Around the World (And Where to Stream Them)

    Could you use some hearty laughs? Then you’re in the right place! Enjoy this selection of diverse international comedies.

  • Happy Passover! Jewish Representation in Unorthodox

    Happy Passover! Jewish Representation in Unorthodox

    Mini-Series Unorthodox gives audiences a glimpse into the Orthodox Jewish community of Williamsburg, Brooklyn. We get to specifically follow a young woman named Ester Shapiro who, after being married off and forced to procreate with a man she doesn’t love, flees the only home she has ever known to start a new life in Berlin.…

  • Throw a Goat For “Trolls: World Tour”

    Throw a Goat For “Trolls: World Tour”

    If you’re quarantined with kids — or if you’re a kid at heart who enjoys Dreamworks animation movies — Trolls: World Tour (2020, Prime Video, Vudu, Fandango) is a sweet, singalong distraction with several positive messages. You don’t need to have seen the first Trolls movie to enjoy this one, but if you have seen…

  • “Bury Your Gays” Trope in TV and How “Wynonna Earp” Defies it

    “Bury Your Gays” Trope in TV and How “Wynonna Earp” Defies it

    I think that the happiness and survival of “Wynonna Earp”’s LGBTQ+ characters is incredibly refreshing in contrast to the prevalence of queer suffering and death in other television.

  • “Small Talk”: An Incluvie Film Festival Review

    “Small Talk”: An Incluvie Film Festival Review

    The most impressive aspect of this film is the honest and natural performances given by the on-screen duo.