Years of Western sanctions are partly to blame for the crisis. But economists say poor management by the country’s authoritarian…
Read More →The battle for Bakhmut is not over — at least not yet. Ukrainian assault brigades offered Moscow a bloody reminder…
Read More →Almost all the artworks in the Coachella Valley biennial are socially engaged and site-specific.…
Read More →After more than a year of bargaining, the cultural institution and its employees are moving forward with a deal that…
Read More →Starting with sensuous posters for Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley, his graphic work came to visually define the city and…
Read More →This week, all of our content on the site is written by women. We’ll update this table of contents page…
Read More →March is Women’s History Month, and we are pleased to celebrate it this week at RogerEbert.com with our ninth edition of Women Writers…
Read More →The visuals and score of Alex Garland’s adaptation of “Annihilation” seek to unsettle. Even five years later, the film evokes…
Read More →Screenwriters are often told that female characters have to be “relatable,” a term considered less offensive than “likable” and yet somehow an…
Read More →Early on in writer/director Damien Chazelle’s “Babylon,” a tribute to the transitional period in Hollywood between the silent era and…
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