‘Frozen 2’ is both more emotional and funnier than its predecessor
By Jonathan Pertile | December 6, 2019“Frozen 2” opens with a song about everything staying the same.
“Frozen 2” opens with a song about everything staying the same.
As the 2010s come to a close, the Recess staff is looking back at the culture that defined the decade.
Coldplay’s first two albums played constantly in my dad’s car when I was a kid.
In January 2018, Migos dropped all 106 minutes of “Culture II.”
Earlier this year, Instagram began experimenting with hiding the “like” count on users’ posts.
My house is filled with books. Bookshelves on bookshelves, stacks on stacks, basically every corner of the house stuffed to the brim with all the stories I grew up with.
To many, the term freestyling immediately inspires a vision of the XXL Freshman yearly cypher, prompting nostalgia of Kodak Black’s trouncing of whoever picked that “lil sorry a** beat.”
Many have attempted to articulate the essence of what makes a cult film a cult film.
Some franchises are better, higher-quality and far more entertaining than others.
Mary Magdalene is one of the first women history robbed.
John Green’s 2005 teen novel “Looking for Alaska” is one of the few books I actively remember reading outside of the classroom in middle school, and for good reason.
In the spirit of The New York Times’ adored “Modern Love” column.
“Jazz, uh, finds a way,” or so says Jeff Goldblum’s Spotify playlist.
Scrolling through Instagram, I can never avoid posts asking for a return to the “Old Disney”: the Disney Channel movies and TV shows that defined childhood in the late ‘90s and early 2000s.
Amazon Prime’s newest anthology series, which premiered Oct. 18, follows a string of New Yorkers in search of one connection to make it all worthwhile.
Divorced from visuals and performances, Robert Eggers’s screenplays read like landmark pieces of American theater still studied and performed for their enduring relevance.
If the Palme d’Or and 99% Rotten Tomatoes rating didn't tip you off already, Bong Joon-ho’s “Parasite” is a masterpiece.
I am shocked to find that, despite boasting a complex range of study away programs, Duke does not offer a study away program in a rich neighborhood.
Two bands that had their heyday in the late ’90s and early 2000s both released albums this month.
The rapper’s ninth album combines the “old Kanye”’s flow and style with the “new Kanye”’s more spiritually-oriented lyrics and production.