He still checks the numbers before he gets out of bed. Streams, followers, old videos that once felt like proof of a future.
You’ve seen it happen. Someone finally gets the promotion they chased for years, posts the celebratory photo, thanks their mentors — and then, a month later, they’re restless again.
European historical cinema is increasingly trading battlefield spectacles for the quiet, systemic defiance found within the ...
The low growl of a bus pulling away, the steady thrum of a highway at night, the distant churn of construction ...
You open a blank document, see the AI helper waiting in the corner, and pause. It promises to generate a clean introduction ...
In the past few years, audiences have made a subtle but decisive choice about where certain films fit into their lives.
As four significant paintings by Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud and Leon Kossoff circulate again through exhibition and sale, ...
Love Me, Love Me is an Italian young-adult romance that centers on a grieving student sent to an elite boarding school in Milan, where she finds herself caught between ...
In a culture defined by speed and digital reproduction, painting can seem almost defiant in its insistence on duration. Cecily Brown’s return to London brings that defiance into focus, ...
Walk through a forest, and it is easy to imagine the trees as peaceful neighbors, quietly supporting one another. Popular books and documentaries have described vast underground fungal webs ...
What begins as a chance encounter in a supermarket turns into an intense live-in romance — and ends with a dead body in an apartment. In 56 Days, a ...
Across much of the world, trust in institutions has become conditional. From public health to environmental disasters, many families quietly carry a question that once felt unthinkable: what happens ...