New in In the Frame

Read Article Netflix’s Bodies is a Time-Travel Thriller About the Soul of London
Bodies, the new Netflix miniseries, is a show less about a time traveling murder mystery and more about the soul of London.
Read Article Killers of the Flower Moon Confronts Where White Supremacy Meets Masculinity
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Read Article The Fall of the House of Usher Is a Phenomenal Accomplishment of Generational Horror
The Fall of the House of Usher, the new Netflix series by Mike Flanagan, suggests that consequence is its own inescapable form of generational trauma.
Read Article Halloween’s Michael Myers Became America’s Fascist Boogeyman
Michael Myers is the embodiment of pure evil. Between 2018 and 2022, that evil took a very specific form. David Gordon Green's Halloween trilogy offers a portrait of America stalked by a resurgent fascism.
Read Article Ahsoka Is About Star Wars’ Obsession with Continuity
Watching Ahsoka, it increasingly feels like Star Wars is a series of Pavlovian triggers designed to appeal to audience members who already care about the objects on screen.
Read Article The Exorcist: Believer Is a Parable for a Divided America
The Exorcist: Believer is a timely piece of horror cinema, a dark allegory about the way in which the modern world seems designed to pit people against one another and force them to make monstrous choices that fundamentally compromise them.
Read Article With Rogue One, Gareth Edwards Gave Star Wars a Sense of Scale
With the release of The Creator in cinemas, it seems like a good opportunity to revisit director Gareth Edwards’ last film, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.
Read Article The Creator is a Science Fiction Allegory About Vietnam War Films
Themes of othering and oppression have been a key metaphor in stories about robots for decades in cinema. However, The Creator stands out for taking this metaphor and applying it directly to not only the Vietnam War, but also cinematic depictions of that conflict.
Read Article No One Will Save You Is a Must-Watch Horror Study of Small-Town Alienation
There is an inherent and nostalgic romance to the idea of small town America, but No One Will Save You plays as a biting commentary on small-town life.
Read Article Now More Than Ever, Hollywood is Counting on Horror
Horror films have always been the quiet steady earners for Hollywood. On the slow road to recovery, studios are relying more than ever on horror films performing well at the box office.

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Read Article Why Are the Disney Remakes So Damned Long?
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