Review: Knock at the Cabin and To Leslie
Shyamalan’s latest twist and a most unexpected Oscar nom.
Shyamalan’s latest twist and a most unexpected Oscar nom.
The lightly fictionalized historical drama shows that it’s hard for staid institutions to grow and change with the times, especially when they aren’t forced to.
The Netflix show ostensibly satirizes government control, but it is not made for anyone truly suspicious of government power.
The first episode paints an enslaver, plantation master, and Royalist autocrat as a leading and even celebrated agent of emancipation.
Elves need not apply.
It's the story of a distant future where rich denizens meddle in the affairs of the past.
C-SPAN has shown House proceedings since 1979 but only what the House chooses to let it show. That needs to change.
Falwell and his wife engaged in extramarital trysts with a younger man and introduced him to powerful friends, such as future president Donald Trump.
"When it comes to problems happening in America, [the NBA is] the first organization saying, 'This is wrong,'" says the former professional basketball player. But then they're silent for victims of torture.
A slew of recent research suggests parents should relax a bit about screen time.
To truly care about virtue is to recognize that it matters how you win: Ends don't justify means.
For the first time, The Great British Baking Show's three best bakers are immigrants to the U.K.
Star Wars remains an epic tale of good vs. evil, but underneath the myth are ordinary human motivations.
What if our interplanetary future involved train heists, legal sex work, and a lot of running from the feds?
Taking humanity from Earth to the stars isn't easy.
"Deep Space Homer" aired only eight years after the real-life Challenger disaster.
Priscilla Villarreal found herself in a jail cell for publishing two routine stories. A federal court still can't decide what to do about that.
Reflexive opposition to the 45th president was terrible for Covid policy and basic ethics.
Over time, betting has been a better predictor than polls, pundits, statistical models, and everything else.
Who doesn't want Rhaenyra to go full Targaryen?
The black market for drugs empowers bad actors while imposing serious burdens on innocents.
The series deals with themes of fate, freedom, and choice.
The show depicts the killer's gruesome crimes but lays some of the blame on the Milwaukee police who failed for so long to catch him.
Between the books and the new TV series, we see two different visions of freedom.
The British spy series shows the lengths to which government overseers will go to protect themselves.
Peaky Blinders reminds us that when the government bans or artificially limits a resource, control of that resource often gets decided through violence.
"There really is no panacea, either technological like cryptocurrency or philosophical like anarchism," says director Todd Schramke.
It's early going. But the first episode is a promising start to HBO's prequel to the famous "Game of Thrones" series.
Friday A/V Club: One cable host's capacity for unearned smugness
The company alleges the composers ignored multiple warnings to cease commercial production of the musical.
Adam Conover and President Barack Obama want to unruin the federal government. But they’re not really willing to truly consider that it’s too big and too wasteful.
On streaming and the big screen, we're paying more for less, even as new ideas seem few and far between.
The comedian largely ignores laws against new supply while arguing we should declare housing a federally funded, government-provided human right.
This chilling cat-and-mouse hunt between Jeff Bridges and John Lithgow is worth your attention.
Novel series gets six-episode launch on AMC.
Hulu's limited TV series on Elizabeth Holmes shows how regulators failed to catch massive, dangerous medical fraud.
The absurdly enjoyable TV drama shows how managers transformed the NBA in the 1980s.
Just don’t expect a whole lot of plot coherence.
Adaptation of Michael Connelly’s book series is punchy, clever, and entertaining.
The drama is engaging, but fans of the book should prepare for a wildly different story.
The latest attempt to adapt the novel comes as an HBO miniseries.
The veteran satirists tackle major issues in America's increasingly divisive culture war with no condescension, cringe, or partisan preference.
Some critics have described Anna Delvey as a "symptom" of the "disease" of "capitalism"—not simply a selfish crook eager for money and fame.
Hulu adaptation of 2017 book thrives on quality performances.
Netflix’s latest LGBT hit would absolutely be appropriate to show in any Florida high school, or anywhere else.
If you can get past the first few plodding, confusing hours, entertainment awaits.
The innocent and guilty alike are ground down by cynical, self-serving officials.