Vampires in Staten Island? It's 'What We Do in the Shadows,' premiering at SXSW 2019.
Read More »Editor Picks
Movie Review: ‘Captain Marvel’ – Simply Marvelous!
'Captain Marvel' is an exhilarating, entertaining, and humorous entry in the MCU canon.
Read More »Book Review: ‘The Bird King’ by G. Willow Wilson
Some books are adventure stories, some are fantasies, and some are historical fiction. However very few writers manage to successfully combine all three. With her newest book, The Bird King, from Grove/Atlantic Press, G. Willow Wilson has joined the ranks of those who’ve accomplished this remarkable feat. Fatima is a …
Read More »PC Videogame Review: ‘Ape Out’
'Ape Out' will not deliver the next deep immersive experience, but it is incredibly fun to play.
Read More »SXSW Music Festival 2019: Preview (March 11–17, Austin, Texas)
Broken Social Scene and Japanese Breakfast are among the thousands of performers scheduled for South by Southwest Music Festival 2019 in Austin, Texas on March 11-17.
Read More »‘Blogcritics’ – An Appreciation
Thinking about my many years here at 'Blogcritics.'
Read More »Movie Review: Guto Parente’s Satirical ‘The Cannibal Club’
Director/screenwriter Guto Parente's dark satire paints a bloody portrait of upper-crust elites who take the concept of "eating the poor" to its extreme.
Read More »PC Videogame Review: ‘Far Cry New Dawn’
'Far Cry New Dawn' was truly enjoyable for me once I embraced it as a silly popcorn-style action experience. The mechanics are proven and amazing, and the new and expanded features are truly fun; they actually made a post-apocalyptic world look beautiful and fun to explore.
Read More »Music Review: Our Native Daughters – ‘Songs of Our Native Daughters’
'Songs of Our Native Daughters' from Our Native Daughters is as rich and textured, and fraught with violence and emotional turmoil, as the history of Africans in the West.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘Random Acts’ Written and Performed by Renata Hinrichs
Atticus Finch is on Broadway, but 'Random Acts,' Renata Hinrichs' penetrating and much more intimate evocation of our racist history, is just six blocks downtown.
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