All Culture
- 'Leave No Trace' shows empathy for those on the fringes of society
Ben Foster stars as Will, a war veteran and widower with post-traumatic stress disorder who has been living undercover with daughter Tom (Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie) in a large public nature preserve in Portland, Ore.
- Ry Cooder's 'The Prodigal Son,' the iScanner app, and more top picks
The podcast 'Drawn' explores various aspects of animated movies and TV shows, biologist Lena (Natalie Portman) signs up for a mission into a mysterious anomaly at a meteor crash site in 'Annihilation,' and more top picks.
- What are you watching? Readers recommend their favorite sitcoms
Monitor TV and movie fans share what they've been watching lately.
- First LookHow two documentaries became summer box office hits
'Won't You Be My Neighbor?' and 'RBG' made unlikely box office stars of their subjects. The two documentaries serve as reminders to be kind and helpful – a message that is missing from the news, those behind the film said.
- In a WordWhen good words turn bad
What do the words politicaster, mongrel, and braggart have in common? They end with a pejorative suffix, a few final letters that change a neutral or positive word into a negative one.
- Of time, tide, and graduation
Mastery can be the work of one moment, or the task of many.
- First LookUS restaurants host refugee chefs as part of worldwide festival
For the first time, restaurants in US cities will turn over their kitchens to refugee chefs for an evening as part of the Refugee Food Festival, organized by the United Nations Refugee Agency and a French nonprofit. The purpose of the program is to increase awareness about the experiences of refugees.
- Poke bowl trend combines choice, healthy ingredients
Many of the latest food trends in the United States, including açaí bowls and sushi burritos, are being driven by environmentally aware Millennials who enjoy customizing quick and healthy fusion-flavored meals.
- First Look'Jurassic World,' 'Incredibles 2' make for Hollywood's fourth-largest weekend ever
Hollywood raked in $280 million in ticket sales in the United States and Canada, roughly double what it made the same weekend last year. The largest factor: "Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom" roaring past bad reviews to open with $150 million.
- Finding common ground at a fiddlers' festival in Idaho
Dwindling numbers and stylistic differences are threatening the future of a beloved fiddlers' festival in Idaho. The solution may lie in something musicians intrinsically know: Simply listening can bridge divides.
- 'The Catcher Was a Spy' is more pallid than its eminently juicy subject deserves
Paul Rudd stars as Morris 'Moe' Berg, a middling catcher in baseball’s major leagues who was recruited by US military intelligence to spy on and possibly assassinate physicist Werner Heisenberg.
- The cast outshines the material in road trip movie ‘Boundaries’
Because of Christopher Plummer and Vera Farmiga, 'Boundaries,' which might have been cooked up by a screenwriting program called RoadMovie, is halfway tolerable.
- 'Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom' is the latest and arguably least of the series
Chris Pratt brings a wry insouciance to the mayhem and the escape from Isla Nublar has its modicum of thrills.
- Top Picks: 'The Party' on DVD and Blu-ray, 'Breaking Big' on PBS, and more
A new National Geographic video, 'Behind the Scenes: Life Below Zero,' provides a look at how the people who work on the show create a time-lapse in such difficult weather conditions, the National Women’s History Museum’s new exhibit, 'Inventive Women,' explores the lives of women in the United States who patented important inventions and technologies, and more top picks.
- What are you watching? Readers recommend 'Occupied,' 'The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel'
Monitor TV and movie fans share what they've been watching lately.
- In a WordHow we came to suffer our franchises
In English, the right to vote itself is sometimes referred to as suffrage. There is a folk etymology on the internet that holds suffrage to be derived from to suffer, in the older sense of 'allow' or 'permit.'
- First LookTV series 'Yellowstone' showcases Native American actors
Gil Birmingham plays Thomas Rainwater in a new series that debuts Wednesday, June 20 – one of many Native American actors playing fully realized, modern native characters, a rarity in the industry. 'Many people ... think that we're just historical artifacts,' Mr. Birmingham said.
- My tuna fish revelation
How could something so dreary become so dreamy?
- First LookTo encourage diversity in Hollywood, a proposed tax credit
California's proposed budget includes a tax credit for movie productions made in state that would require reporting diversity statistics and have sexual harassment protections in place for its employees. Credits would be awarded to "below the line" hiring practices, not just for starring actors and directors.
- In China, US films struggle against homegrown movies
With audiences in North America steadily shrinking, Chinese moviegoers have never been more important to Hollywood. But China has also poured billions of dollars into its own film industry.