“In Three Billboards, Black and Latino characters come to the rescue of white protagonists yet enjoy no character development of their own.”
Read More“While Wonder does generally reflect its diverse setting of New York City, leading roles remain exclusively white.”
Read More“Thor: Ragnarok does not pass the Bechdel test, which should be a low bar to clear in a film with two female leads.”
Read More“Last Flag Flying never condescends to its characters because of their disabilities.”
Read More“The two leads of Wonderstruck are both deaf, one of whom is portrayed wonderfully by deaf talent Millicent Simmonds.”
Read More“Power Rangers exudes a deep understanding that inclusion is more than just a checklist. This is no more apparent than when they mix different identities within the same character.”
Read More“Given that the story centers on toy pony princesses with magical abilities, My Little Pony: The Movie contains multitudes to unpack.”
Read More“Joon-ho Bong’s Okja misses the mark in some ways, but it does present creativity and global collaboration.”
Read More“Kapoor & Sons chips away at the tall task of normalizing LGBTQ individuals in Indian cinema.”
Read More“Highly enjoyable popcorn flick which ticks the box of female empowerment despite struggling to break into truly progressive territory.”
Read More“At some point, we need to stop glorifying the deaths of saintly, self-sacrificial minorities and women, and instead offer them better roles and agency over their own lives.”
Read More“Sophie and the Rising Sun is a wonderfully intersectional film, featuring interracial love and friendships set to the backdrop of WWII and the languid air of the South.”
Read More“It’s a relief to watch a silly action movie without worrying about misogyny or cringeworthy racism.”
Read More“Get Out winks at centuries of painful history and honors it with an absurd, no-bullshit de-pantsing of race in America.”
Read More“It’s exciting to see how easily this younger generation is able to dismantle heteronormativity.”
Read More“Wilson’s story is granular, depicting the vicious power that patriarchs can wield as they hurt the women and children in their lives.”
Read More“The film is at its best when depicting the sheer estrangement between generations within the modern Chinese family.”
Read More“This movie explores identity and what it means to be ethnically one thing, but belonging to a different nationality.”
“The real life stories of Geeta and Babita Phogat are stronger and more feminist than this moralizing product written and directed by four men.”
Read More“The real Cosme McMoon was Mexican Irish. In Florence Foster Jenkins, his actor is white.”
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