Brian Bowe reports from Storyhouse Festival's Irish-language screenwriting panel on the exciting rise of cinema as Gaeilge ...
James Holohan reviews Mikko Mäkelä's film Sebastian, about a writer who begins living a double life as a sex worker in order ...
Japanese Breakfast return with For Melancholy Brunettes (& Sad Women) - a haunting, intimate album exploring love, loss, and ...
With over 20 years of experience as a social worker, addiction counsellor, and therapist, John Balfe is currently a lecturer at South East Technological University (SETU), where he teaches and ...
Much of the marketing for An Taibhse has centred around it being the first-ever Irish language horror movie, and of course any project that reasserts the power and relevance of the Irish language is ...
Much of the marketing for An Taibhse has centred around it being the first-ever Irish language horror movie, and of course any project that reasserts the power and relevance of the Irish language is ...
Much of the marketing for An Taibhse has centred around it being the first-ever Irish language horror movie, and of course any project that reasserts the power and relevance of the Irish language is ...
Kevin Burke looks back at High Fidelity, Stephen Frears' gen-x cult classic starring John Cusack, Jack Black, and Iben Hjejle ...
Mother’s Day is a minefield. You want to celebrate, but not with some saccharine, Hallmark-friendly tune. You need great songs about mothers—the kind that actually say something real. Whether it’s ...
Ahead of their upcoming experimental documentary Pavements, Danny Kilmartin breaks down the best Pavement songs to get new listeners started.
Looking for where to start with Pavement? This guide breaks down their back catalogue, from their lo-fi slacker days to their experimental work.
Made six decades ago this year, The Sound of Music (1965) was directed by Robert Wise, the prolific talent behind West Side Story (1961), The Day The Earth Stood Still (1951) and The Set Up (1949).
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