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Barry Avrich's documentary revisits the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on Israel from the perspective of one Israeli family.
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Marvel's White Tiger, frog sorcery, Indigenous tales and more are in "¡Wepa!," coming to New York Public Library, spotlighting work by or about the island.
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Raoul Peck's Orwell: 2 2=5 looks at the writer who gave us a modern dystopian classic — and doubles as a portrait of how authoritarianism works that feels way too familiar
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Director Kelly Reichardt on balancing art with commerce and working with Josh O'Connor.
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A young orphan becomes mesmerized by a volatile actress in this dark fairy tale.
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Based on a memoir by Alysia Abbott, the movie chronicles gay liberation and the AIDS crisis from the perspective of a gay man's daughter.
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For years, he battled impostor syndrome: "I felt like I was just barely hanging on." Finally, with "Roofman," he says he can hold his own against any actor.
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Cillian Murphy plays a beleaguered teacher at an all-boys reform school in this exhausting movie on Netflix.
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Nine librarians are profiled in Kim A. Snyder's gripping documentary about censorship in public schools.
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The horror author Rachel Harrison recommends books that offer emotional insight and social commentary beyond the scares.
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The celebrated author of "Gravity's Rainbow" may have a cult following on campus and a reputation for formidable literary high jinks. But his novels are also just plain fun.
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The beloved primatologist and conservationist died on Wednesday at the age of 91
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The Grammy-winning artist previously said he skipped touring in the U.S. over concerns that ICE "could be outside" his concerts
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"My last message to Jane was simple: ‘You are my hero.'"
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The lawsuit was an effort to keep ‘And Tango Makes Three,' about two male penguins raising a chick, in a county's school libraries.
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The recent upheaval in late-night programming has shown a spotlight on ratings and revenue — and spurred questions of political influence.
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When political times are bad, humor is often the only remedy. Stephen Colbert tries to help here with an animated parody of President Donald Trump, his family and staff- first seen in small segments on his "Late Show" but expanded to a half-hour series for Showtime (where there's much less content restriction.) Everyone, on both political sides, is depicted here as caricatures as you'd see in newspaper political cartoons- Trump with an orange face and obviously fake hair, his wife Melania looking and talking a bit like "Natasha" from Rocky and Bullwinkle, daughter Ivanka as a stereotypical "valley girl" and (now-former) Attorney General Jeff Sessions oddly as a small gnome-like being, to name just a few. Each episode is given a loose plot that seems to exist mainly just to support the jokes the wri...Read the entire review
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