“Ford v. Ferrari lightly challenges the ‘60s-era cliche of male infallibility.”
Read More“It matters that the filmmaker satirizing the horrors of the Holocaust is Jewish.”
Read More“To limit the narrative of World War II to a white, straight, American male perspective willfully skews history.”
Read MoreParasite exudes cultural specificity, with deep cuts to Korean headlines and reality TV shows.
Read More“Women and Black characters are even more diminished in The Irishman than in Martin Scorsese’s previous gangster films.”
Read More“Hustlers hits a home run with its wider allegory to capitalism in America.”
Read More“Norton humanizes Tourette Syndrome in Motherless Brooklyn but still reinforces media tropes about the condition.”
Read More“Clemency ‘shows’ rather then ‘tells’ its inclusive tenets.”
Read More“The entire premise of Jexi, that a broken man needs to be fixed by a woman, has no place in modern-day filmmaking.”
Read More“Joker suggests that mental health issues require government funding—a narrative that would actually be progressive, if the film stopped there.”
Read More“It: Chapter Two fails to treat trauma with any nuance or care, leaving its victimized characters high and dry.”
Read More“Knives Out weaves in some effective commentary on immigration.”
Read More“Many films set abroad borrow ‘exotic’ backdrops and locals to make their lead characters more interesting. To the Ends of the Earth avoids all that.”
Read More“Simply having people of color on screen does not translate into good representation.”
Read More“Ruby must deal with the stigma of being a Black woman in the VERY white Irish mob. But like so many topics in The Kitchen, nothing ever comes to fruition.”
Read More“Based on true stories of workplace harassment, the gender-swapped tragicomedy Step Into My Office highlights the absurdity of what women regularly face.”
Read More“Lose yourself in this nostalgic summer retrospective, and maybe learn a thing or two about the modern history of Taiwan.”
Read More“Non-bros need not apply.”
Read More“Luce upends the Exceptional Negro trope.”
Read More“‘Not ghosts but human beings,’ reads a slogan for International Albinism Awareness Day, so it’s ironic that the sole person with albinism in Scary Stories shows up as a ghost.”
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