The Village Voice recommends the exhibition "Orwell and Truth," which will be on view at NYU Kimmel Windows Gallery through December 2026.
The Village Voice reviews the McManus brothers’ latest film, "Redux Redux," which revels in B-movie pulp while aiming higher.
The L.A. Weekly and Village Voice review Emerald Fennell screen adaptation of Emily Brontë’s 19th century original.
The Village Voice revisits a 1957 article by four staffers on how they, all servicemen in 1945, reacted to Franklin Roosevelt's death.
If you don’t mind that the players in the story are not present, and you’re comfortable wearing mixed reality glasses, you might want to check out An Ark, at The Shed. While virtual reality replaces ...
Near an imposing building in the center of Teheran, there stands an extraordinarily graceful arch, created for a Persian king nearly 150 years ago. Tourists come to marvel at this arch, quite unaware ...
New Yorkers, however, long ago had their bullshit detectors redlined by the always self-promoting, self-dealing, and responsibility-dodging POTUS — he lost the city 70% to 30% in 2024 — and have never ...
From the moment Caireen starts talking, you’re not sure if she’s here to seduce you or just absolutely roast your prudish Aunt Linda. She does that very Canadian thing of acting wholesome while saying ...
The flayed, bloody flesh, screeching soundtrack, Gothic sets, and elegantly flapping costumes are all on brand for the visionary director. In the 200 years since Mary Shelley first realized her ...
Plaster casts of Leonard Nimoy’s head crowded one display table. Life-sized posters of William Shatner striking various heroic poses covered the walls. The air was filled with a cacophony of ...
Who defeated Charles Van Doren? / Which movie won the Oscar for Best Picture in 1955, and why did Herbert Stempel have to pretend that he didn’t know? / What did President Eisenhower call “a terrible ...
With its cheesy boardwalk settings and beatnik ambience — bongo player “Chaino” gets singled out in the credits — writer/director Curtis Harrington’s Night Tide (1961) proves an apt first-time star ...