Jacobs School of Music conference to celebrate hip-hop's golden age
An interdisciplinary conference presented by the Jacobs School of Music on Feb. 16 and 17 will celebrate the golden age of hip-hop in honor of Black History Month.
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An interdisciplinary conference presented by the Jacobs School of Music on Feb. 16 and 17 will celebrate the golden age of hip-hop in honor of Black History Month.
Welcome back to Double Feature, the IDS film podcast where the powers that be let us in a podcast booth to give you hot takes and maybe some lukewarm ones too.
“The Favourite,” the newest film from Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos, is coming to the IU Cinema’s screen this weekend.
Welcome to back to Double Feature, the IDS film podcast where the powers that be let us in a podcast booth to give you hot takes and maybe some lukewarm ones too.
Welcome back to Double Feature, the IDS film podcast where the powers that be let us in a podcast booth to give you hot takes and maybe some lukewarm ones, too.
At heart, IU graduate student Kenneth Arnold is an entertainer.
Welcome back to Double Feature, the IDS film podcast where the powers that be let us in a podcast booth to give you hot takes and maybe some lukewarm ones, too.
Perchedon a lavishly decorated stage, dressed and made up as a young boy, is Ashlyn Brown.
Welcome back to Double Feature, the Indiana Daily Student film podcast where the powers that be let us in a podcast booth to give you hot takes and maybe some lukewarm ones, too.
As a tipsy horde dances and roaring guitar fills the musty basement at deafening volumes, photographer Matt Jaskulski crouches and waves his camera around. He’s trying to snap the perfect shot.
There’s no such thing as a bad year for art – not for literature, not for music, not for cinema. That new art is being created at all, no less by so many and in such mass quantities, is innately a positive.
I laughed many times watching “Boy Erased,” much to the presumable frustration of the four other theater patrons suffering through this horrid ordeal of a film with me.
Welcome back to Double Feature, the IDS film podcast where the powers that be let us in a podcast booth to give you hot takes and maybe some lukewarm ones, too.
There’s nothing more American than creating a holiday dedicated to eating based off the erasure of the genocide of indigenous peoples. In celebration of an entire week of no school and lots of food, here are some scrumptious food-themed movies and T.V. shows to watch:
Dakota Johnson gave perhaps the oddest pair of performances of the year.
Voting is one of the most patriotic acts there is. So much so that it almost compares to heroic acts of domestic terrorism in protest of a fascist state. To celebrate Election week, hosts Chris Forrester and Annie Aguiar are talking about the film “V for Vendetta" and the 1999 comedy “Election."
If ever there was a case to be made for the Netflix Original as the future of media consumption, it was in the days of “House of Cards” and “Stranger Things.” As the fledgling phenomenon of streaming was on the rise, the service's idea of instantly accessible, streaming-exclusive content was perfect for the instant gratification of binge-watching.
“We must break the nose of every beautiful thing,” announces a stone-faced Tilda Swinton at one point in Luca Guadagnino’s new sprawling horror fantasia, “Suspiria.”
Luca Guadagnino, whose new film "Suspiria" is in limited release, makes films about escape from repression, the momentary liberations we experience when freed from the crushing norms of society and who we become when afforded that freedom.
In 1978, John Carpenter revolutionized the slasher horror subgenre with his classic “Halloween.” In 2018, after sequels, remakes, remakes of sequels and sequels of remakes, things finally make sense in Haddonfield, Illinois.