What to watch while you’re isolating at home
By Nina Wilder | March 17, 2020Over the course of the last week, day-to-day life around the world has come to a grinding halt in response to the rapid spread of COVID-19.
Over the course of the last week, day-to-day life around the world has come to a grinding halt in response to the rapid spread of COVID-19.
The world of “The Roadkill Club” is not quite like our own.
On March 11, this year’s Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, which is held annually in Durham, N.C., was cancelled.
As soon as she walked in, Retta began joking about the radical changes at Duke since her graduation in 1992.
Meg Remy always seems to return at exactly the right time.
Classical music has a problem. Its audience is mostly white, educated, wealthy, and old
After announcing and promptly disregarding multiple release dates, Lil Uzi Vert finally released his sophomore album “Eternal Atake.”
If you’ve walked through the Chappell Family gallery in Perkins Library any time recently, you’ve probably noticed it: the big colorful arrows and ribbons on the walls, the twisting wires and strange diagrams galore.
In all its glamorous artificiality and melodrama, “Love Island” occupied a strangely comforting place in my life, wherein its faults were fodder for my ironic consumption.
Whether he’s experimenting with psychedelic rock, folktronica or house, Caribou makes music that is, above all else, fun.
In Durham’s burgeoning underground EDM scene, The Fruit is quickly becoming the life of the party.
In many ways, Wong Kar-wai’s “In the Mood for Love” is the first real movie I’ve ever watched.
I didn’t grow up particularly religious. My parents rejected most political and corporate institutions with a persistent Gen X apathy.
What I have only recently come to realize is how much “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” shaped my conception of womanhood.
On “Mariposa AR” are several stories of immigration to Durham.
On Thursday, Feb. 20, the Center for Documentary Studies held a book launch for photographer Jessica Ingram’s “Road Through Midnight: A Civil Rights Memorial.”
This fall, Duke will introduce a new major concentration and minor within the Visual and Media Studies major: Cinematic Arts.
From Klein bottles to community, the Triangle’s ceramics artists can build just about anything.
I think out of all of Disney’s properties, I found comfort in the fantasy of Winnie the Pooh because, to me, it seemed like all of the characters could actually exist.
In brief glances and lovelorn sobs, “Portrait of a Lady on Fire” finds a passion that transcends time and burns brighter with each day.