-

Death Feels Very Close: Ryûsuke Hamaguchi on Evil Does Not Exist
With “Evil Does Not Exist,” his enigmatic follow-up to the Oscar-winning drama “Drive My Car,” Ryûsuke Hamaguchi stages an ominous, slow-burning thriller deep in the Japanese wilderness. There, in the small village of Mizubiki, not far from Tokyo, the residents live in relative harmony with nature, chopping wood, gathering wild wasabi, and drawing pristine water…
-

Evil Does Not Exist
“You can’t get a head start if you aim for perfection,” a clueless moneyed entrepreneur muses during a video chat with his two shell-shocked subordinates in the new film from writer-director Ryûsuke Hamaguchi. In the context of the actual conversation the sentiment is even more inane than it sounds on the face of it. And…
-

Sophos Endpoint: Adaptive Attack Protection Gets Even Better
Sophos continues to deliver the strongest endpoint protection in the industry.
-

They Shoot Owls in California, Don’t They?
An audacious federal plan to protect the spotted owl would eradicate hundreds of thousands of barred owls in the coming years.
-

How Black Forest Cake Conquered the World
Dessert lovers from Chile to Pakistan to Fiji claim it as a national treat. How did it get there from the woods of Germany?
-

D.C.’s Best Restaurants
The food scene in and around the nation’s capital is vibrant these days, with Italian, Ethiopian, Salvadoran and more. Comments are open.
-

5 spring dinner salads to celebrate the season
These hearty spring salads are full of seasonal produce, including asparagus, rhubarb and sugar snap peas, and fit for a main course.
-

I have to apologize a lot. These cookies help me ask for forgiveness.
When my anger results in an outburst I’m ashamed of, I pull frozen cookie dough out of my freezer and bake my way to an apology.
-

Supreme Court to hear cases on veterans’ benefits, pet food and visas next term
The Supreme Court announced Monday that it would take up four cases for the term beginning in October.
-

Inflation Is Stubborn. Is the Federal Budget Deficit Making It Worse?
Economists are divided over whether the growing amount of federal borrowing is fueling demand and driving up prices.