
Film recalls 1999 Royal Oak Post Office murder suicide
Nineteen years ago on November 14th one of the country's more shocking examples of workplace violence took place at the Royal Oak Post Office in Michigan.

"Social Network" is a must see
"The Social Network" highlights the positive and far-reaching aspects of the inevitable online revolution sweeping the world through Facebook. But the film also emphasizes the betrayal, greed, and lonely attributes that came to the network's creator along with the fame and glory.

The fruits of corporate globalization: a review of “El Traspatio”
This film is a searing and realistic depiction of what international monopoly capital does to the lives of ordinary working men and women.

Philosophy is dead, asserts Stephen Hawking in new book
Stephen Hawking, one of the world's best known physicists and a great thinker-in-general, has written, after almost a ten year hiatus, a short new book that gives some surprising new answers to the ultimate questions of life.

‘Machete' is dead on, immigrants are heroes
After seeing the movie "Machete," I thought this could quite possibly be the worst film ever or it could be one of those timely political satires perhaps on the verge of pure genius.

Latin America rejects neoliberalism
It would be hard to avoid admiring this ground-breaking documentary.

“Inception” has viewers guessing ― dreams vs. reality
From beginning to end "Inception" has viewers guessing about what's real and what's not.

“The Girl” is tough and mean
Meet Lisbeth Salander, standing 5 feet tall and 88 pounds, she is the toughest and meanest gangster movie protagonist to date.

Totalitarian household: review of "Dogtooth"
Giorgos Lanthimos's recent film "Dogtooth" captures the physical and moral damage that occurs when what is perhaps the ultimate insult is visited upon otherwise healthy human beings.

A cold, grim look at life in Ozarks
Movie review: Debra Granik's "Winter's Bone" takes viewers to the dark, shady, shadowy and sinister world of meth labs in Ozarks.

