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Pitfall Movie Review by Matt Boiselle Pitfall – directed by James Kondelik, and written by Victor Rose and James Kondelik, and starring Marshall Williams, Alexandra Essoe and Richard Harmon Synopsis: After a young man gets separated from his group in the woods, he falls into a 10 ft deep pit full of spikes, impaling him
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Bloodthirsty Movie Review by Matt Boiselle Bloodthirsty – directed by Nachela Knox and written by Chad Johnson, and starring Stephen Barrington, Kiana Sosa and John Blaq Synopsis: On the night of their anniversary, Sarah is unexpectedly called into work, but when a sudden zombie outbreak traps her inside, Brian must fight through the chaos to
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Rihanna stepped out on Mother’s Day alongside A$AP Rocky in a coordinated street style moment that balanced tailoring with accessories. The singer wore an oversized black suit featuring strong shoulders and wide-leg trousers, paired with pointed snakeskin pumps and oversized shield sunglasses. She accessorized with layered jewelry and carried a woven Chanel top-handle bag along
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The stars stepped out in an array of structured tailoring, couture silhouettes, and statement prints for the Disney Upfront 2026 presentation in New York City. From Angela Bassett’s rose-embroidered velvet suiting to Lindsay Lohan’s sculptural couture gown, the event delivered a mix of polished daytime glamour and fashion-forward detailing. See what celebrities wore below. Angela
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Horror has always thrived on evolution. What starts on the big screen rarely stays there for long, and some of the genre’s most unforgettable films have found a second life in gaming. The result is something far more immersive than a passive watch. You are no longer just witnessing the terror; you are inside it,
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Saigon Story: Two Shootings in the Forest Kingdom Kim Nguyen National Film Board of Canada 29 April 2026 | Hot Docs Documentaries sometimes do something simple and useful: they make a well-known historical image feel unfamiliar again. Kim Nguyen’s Saigon Story: Two Shootings in the Forest Kingdom begins with Eddie Adams’ Execution, Saigon, South Vietnam,
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For most indie fans, Broken Social Scene are considered indispensablethanks toYou ForgotItin People(2002) and Broken Social Scene (2005), which is good news for the mostly overlooked producer David Newfield, who helmed both efforts. The Toronto collective did take quite a step up from their debut album, even if their initial outing was among the first
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Beauty is best served with rage. Artemisia Gentileschi, Clarice Lispector, and Anne Sexton all apotheosized through the sublimation of rage. Why? Their works refuse to be timid reactions against patriarchal society; they violently threw themselves against oppression. Therefore, it endowed their creations with the risk of self-annihilation. You’re unwilling or unable to look away as
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Historical fiction is a site of postmodernism. In whatever historical period a book takes place, we all bring associations and images to that time period. The recent past is obviously easier to conjure and reference with the visual support of film and photography. The 1970s were an especially important time in cultural history in the
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Briana Wyatt brings something increasingly rare to music today — sincerity. Her voice is not driven by ego or spectacle, but by purpose, passion, and faith. Every time she sings, there is a sense that the performance means something deeper, and audiences feel that connection immediately. Brianna Wyatt’s artistry is rooted in inspiration. Whether she
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Industrial music often gets the rap of sounding cold or distant, but not Chicago’s rising Body Shop. The Florida transplants recently released Sex Body, an EP that challenges that stereotype, with a bracing sound that blends danger and wit and a reputation for confrontational live shows. The music drips with danger and sex, but isn’t
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Unfortunately, there are so many deserving LPs that are often underrated by critics and overlooked when compiling “Best of” decade lists. For every album by Beck inducted into the “Best of the 1990s” canon, deserving records by the Lemonheads and Belly are tossed aside. Moreover, for every obvious choice by a well-established artist, more subtly
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Jolanda Moletta has been described as a “one-woman electronic choir”, creating wordless compositions or “sonic and visual spells”, as described on her Bandcamp, through extended vocal techniques. On her two previous albums, Night Caves (2025) and Nine Spells (2022), she created gorgeous, cavernous worlds with layers of impeccable singing. On her third release, Oceanine, she
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In so many ways, Thundercat’s music has always exploded with color. Often, his fingers blaze across the fretboard of his bass guitar, leaving explosions of notes in their wake. Meanwhile, his albums consist of multiple musical genres exploding against one another like popcorn kernels under a pot lid. Starting with his solo debut, 2011’s The
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In the excellent song “An Rá,” from Kneecap’s extraordinary new album Fenian, the Belfast rap trio mock the supposed gifts of British imperialism—a sardonic inventory of what the Crown left behind—and the joke lands like a brick through a window. Three lads from West Belfast telling centuries of colonial history to fuck off, and they
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FOUND TV, the dedicated home for found footage horror, has announced its latest FOUND Original, Go to Sleep, a psychological found footage feature from director Steven Espinoza and writer/star Chris Vander Kaay. The film will make its debut at the inaugural Recovered Reels Festival in Quakertown, Pennsylvania, before launching globally on FOUND TV. Go to
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The Delivery Line Nance Ackerman Melki 20 April 2026 | (Hot Docs) Gulbadan, a midwife in Afghanistan, bathes one of her small children. She runs an obstetric clinic and assists pregnant women in remote parts of the country. In this scene from The Delivery Line, though, she is simply at home. She slowly eases a
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At New York’s 92NY, Stanley Tucci reaffirmed why sophistication, style and substance remain timeless currencies in both fashion and film. By Prince Carter In an era where celebrity often favors spectacle over substance, Stanley Tucci continues to stand apart as a symbol of refinement — understated, intelligent and effortlessly stylish. During his recent conversation with
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Music criticism is often caught up in a forward momentum, where an album’s innovation defines its quality. Revivals and the conditions that cause them are equally interesting. With the numerous developments that have taken place in black metal since the end of the 1990s, from the maligned blackgaze to the embraced disso-black, its history can
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Fragments: The Complete 1969 Salle Pleyel Concerts The Cecil Taylor Unit Elemental Music 24 April 2026 By 1969, New York-born pianist and composer Cecil Taylor was already a major figure in the free jazz world. His energetic, percussive approach to his instrument, combined with complex improvisational technique, led music writer Val Wilmer to refer to
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Since their early beginnings as post-punk novices at the dawn of the 1980s, England’s And Also the Trees have steadily evolved in their trade of goth-inspired rock. The band’s earliest incarnation, comprised of two sets of brothers—singer Simon Huw Jones and guitarist Justin Jones, along with drummer Nick Havas, and bassist Graham Havas—proved possibly the
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Miss Grit is the project of New York-based Korean-American Musician Margaret Sohn. After returning from a particularly gruelling tour for their previous album, Follow the Cyborg, they sought to capture the spontaneous joy of creation. However, post-tour anxieties meant that the music became more personal than they could have ever imagined, with Sohn distancing themselves
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