MOVIE
F1 + Joseph Kosinski | M3GAN 2.0 | Speed Racer (2008)
- By West virginia digital
- . July 3, 2025
On Truth & Movies this week, we discuss the high speed blockbuster F1 and spoke to its director Joseph Kosinski.
28 Ways Later | Little White Lies
- By West virginia digital
- . July 3, 2025
If Danny Boyle and Alex Garland’s much-feted 28 Years Later taught us anything, it’s that the UK has struggled to
In the mood for In The Mood For Love
- By West virginia digital
- . July 3, 2025
In hindsight, it is not surprising that the film’s nostalgic rendition of 1962 Hong Kong left such an indelible influence
The Sensual Elegance of I Am Love
- By West virginia digital
- . July 3, 2025
This feature is the fourth in our summer series, La Dolce Vita: A Celebration of Italian Screen Style, in partnership with
Jurassic World: Rebirth review – struggles to…
- By West virginia digital
- . July 3, 2025
Rather than a triumphant replay of the old hits, Jurassic World: Rebirth is a bit more like Malibu Stacy with a new hat. It’s a repackaged
Basketball: A Cinematic History | Little White Lies
- By West virginia digital
- . July 3, 2025
White Men Can’t Jump is about as graceful as pop filmmaking can be. On the surface it’s a touch formulaic –
Hot Milk review – never properly gels
- By West virginia digital
- . July 3, 2025
Rebecca Lenkiewicz adapts Deborah Levy’s best-selling novel, but the result is lacklustre. This icy psychodrama of deep familial discord plays
GriefTech: Death and Technology in The Shrouds,…
- By West virginia digital
- . July 3, 2025
This trend can also be traced in recent television series. In Apple TV+’s Severance, biocorp giant Lumon manufactures brain chips that
Severed, Reprinted, Impersonated: The Rise of Cinema’s ‘Work Double’
- By West virginia digital
- . July 3, 2025
A spate of recent works are pondering the concept of replicating or separating oneself in response to our increasingly economically
The Shrouds review – precision filmmaking of the…
- By West virginia digital
- . July 3, 2025
It’s become a cliché to say that David Cronenberg’s The Fly remains one of the most heartbreaking films of the 1980s,