How ‘The Night of The Hunter’ Highlights Religious Manipulation for Personal Gain

How ‘The Night of The Hunter’ Highlights Religious Manipulation for Personal Gain

Charles Laughton’s 1965 horror film ‘The Night of the Hunter’ presents Robert Mitchum’s preacher as a man who “manipulates people through their religious beliefs”. Essay by Nicole Sanacore.

Read More

Capturing Modernity: The Challenge of Portraying the Contemporary World

Capturing Modernity: The Challenge of Portraying the Contemporary World

For the first time in cinema history, the most prominent filmmakers of the day are retreating from portraying modern life. Why is this? And what effect does this have? Essay by Noah Sparkes.

Read More

Making Sense of Alex Garland’s ‘Men’

Making Sense of Alex Garland’s ‘Men’

Understanding the filmmaking intent of Alex Garland: an analysis of Garland’s philosophy and use of iconography in his 2022 feature film ‘Men’. Essay by A. D. Jameson.

Read More

Top Gun: Maverick Is in Love With Companionship, Familiarity

Top Gun: Maverick Is in Love With Companionship, Familiarity

‘Top Gun: Maverick’ is the biggest hit of 2022 because it’s more than an action movie, it’s a romance flick dedicated to all the things we love, and love, and love again. Essay by Callum McGuigan.

Read More

Straightwashing Removes All Rainbows: Removing Bisexuals from Comic Book Films

Straightwashing Removes All Rainbows: Removing Bisexuals from Comic Book Films

In 2022, the blockbuster sphere’s choices in representation must face more scrutiny, particularly with regard to straightwashing bisexual comic book characters. Essay by Paul Klein.

Read More

‘Blue My Mind’ and New Female Monsters

‘Blue My Mind’ and New Female Monsters

‘Blue My Mind’ cathartically redefines the old-fashioned film logic that pain must be felt in the coming-of-age period and thus redefines the rulings of the monstrous feminine. Essay by Grace Britten.

Read More

Is Marvel’s Insistence on Being So Firmly On-The-Nose Rooted in a Distrust of Its Audience?

Is Marvel’s Insistence on Being So Firmly On-The-Nose Rooted in a Distrust of Its Audience?

In ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’, Marvel, writer Michael Waldron and director Sam Raimi, tell rather than show. Is this because they don’t trust us to understand film language? Essay by Callum McGuigan.

Read More
1 2 3 4 5 10