
The Rise of CliffsNotes Cinema
Oversimplified literary remakes miss the point of the works they are adapting.

Oversimplified literary remakes miss the point of the works they are adapting.

The pop star transformed the normal act of browsing your laptop into something interesting—and unsettling.

With the rise of screen culture, all the world has stage fright.

Years before Mel Robbins published her best-selling self-help book, a struggling writer posted a poem with a similar message.

The show allowed the Euphoria star, who refuses to be pigeonholed, a chance to show her range.

Julio Torres’s existential comedy Problemista is a marvelous mixture of surrealism and social satire.

Maritime Morse code was formally phased out in 1999, but in California, a group of enthusiasts who call themselves the “radio squirrels” keeps the tradition alive.

Performing pop songs live offers a thrilling reward—if your voice doesn’t betray you, that is.

Paul Giamatti’s performance in The Holdovers is just another high point in a long, memorable career.

For Édouard Louis, revisiting the past is an act of survival.

Denis Villeneuve’s Dune: Part Two is a triumphant—and tragic—look at the cost of power.

This American Ex-Wife vividly describes the liberating power of a divorce but falters when it tries to persuade readers to follow suit.

In a newly discovered letter to a college student, written shortly after the premiere of his most famous work, the playwright describes his theory of tragedy.