A structuralist film about narrative structure Intermezzo compresses five cinematic melodramas by compiling parallel fragments through a polyphonic overlapping of timeframes to foreground the ...
It's the end of summer vacation for Amin. The young photographer spends cozy evenings with Charlotte, the ex-girlfriend of his Casanova cousin. She talks to him about literature, he photographs her.
If you don't already know what Pokémon is, you're probably one of those otaku who has shielded themselves from all signs of Western civilization in favor of spending their days locked in a dark ...
These first lines of Sally Rooney’s new novel, “Intermezzo,” are unlike the clean, bracing openings of her previous three. “Marianne answers the door when Connell rings the bell,” the ...
Sally Rooney's latest novel, Intermezzo, was all but guaranteed to be a hit, but the book's rollout has pushed excitement to ...
MO (where he served as Culture Editor for its student-run print and online publications), and a brief stint of reviewing movies for fun. He would later continue that side-hustle of film criticism ...
It is a banner week as far as the number of titles being released on DVD and Blu-ray. “It Ends With Us” Grade C: Too much ...
Sally Rooney’s new novel explores the relationship between two brothers grieving the death of their father, and follows their complicated love lives with Rooney’s usual panache.
November 8, 2024 • Eastwood takes measured aim at the American justice system in a film that centers on a murder trial — and a juror who realizes he may be implicated in the crime. November 8 ...
See portable DVD player. In addition to DVD movies and music CDs, DVD players typically support "plus" and "minus" formats (read-only DVD+R and DVD-R and rewritable DVD+RW and DVD-RW); however ...
Intermezzo, her fourth novel, is her most fully developed and moving yet. It’s about two Irish brothers, 32-year-old Peter Koubek, a Dublin lawyer, and 22-year-old Ivan, a chess prodigy, and their ...
Sally Rooney’s newest novel, “Intermezzo,” was released on September 24, introducing its story with a quote by Austrian philosopher, Ludwig Wittgenstein: “But don’t you feel grief now? (But aren’t you ...