A Tribute to a Lost Community and the Photographers Who Documented It
DIRECTED BY DENNIS SCHOLL AND KAREEM TABSCH/2018KINO LORBER/ STREET DATE MARCH 19, 201...
Story of Friendship and Acceptance is Benign But Bland
DIRECTED BY CHRIS BUTLER/2019
A few months ago I switched to a vegetarian diet which means try...
Mary Kay Place Shines in a Tale of Aging, Making Amends, and Letting Go
DIRECTED BY KENT JONES/2019
We are still early in 2019, but I have a new favo...
When Bible Belt and Queer Oasis Collide
I am intrigued by the picture of Eureka Springs, Arkansas, created in The Gospel of Eureka, the new documentary ...
True confession time: I have always had an enormous crush on Michelle Pfeiffer. Sure, a lot of that has to do with physical attractiveness- she is one of the most beautiful people alive. But so much of it stems from her presence on-screen, the way she brings- not a vulnerability per se, but more like a raw, exposed nerve to her performances. It was these qualities that were apparent, even when she was first slowly breaking into features in the early 1980’s.
An International Batch of Oscar Nominated Documentary Shorts
ShortsTV is bringing this year’s batch of Oscar nominated Live Action, Documentary and Anim...
Sharon is an experienced writer with her own blog and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch's religion blog. A wife and mother to 5 kids, she in on staff with her church and enjoys running, coffee, and good books. A bit of an activist around certain topics (politics, religion, sexuality, gender), Sharon looks to cinema for the empathy and fun it can provide. “I believe art is a gift from a good Creator. Sometimes Christians are suspicious of film, but I find that thoughtful engagement with movies has been a means of personal and spiritual growth for me. I hope my involvement with Zeke helps others to have a similar experience with film!”