Roger Corman: A Filmmaker’s Filmmaker
An account of all the lives Corman touched, the careers he helped to jump-start, and the genres he pioneered would fill several books.
An account of all the lives Corman touched, the careers he helped to jump-start, and the genres he pioneered would fill several books.
Had he lived long enough to witness the fruits of liberal capitalism, perhaps Orwell would finally have accepted the failure of socialism.
The story of Hollywood’s most unlikely blockbuster franchise, Mad Max.
The new attention economy will always privilege the lowest common denominator in performance art, as it does in everything else.
Salman Rushdie’s new memoir, ‘Knife,’ describes the assassination attempt its author survived and offers a moving contemplation of mortality.
The privatisation of space travel is cutting the cost of rocket launches and powering innovation.
The history of utopian fiction proves that we can’t even imagine a better world.
Rob Henderson's 'Troubled' is a disjointed book, but provides valuable testimony to the importance of a stable childhood.
We hear much talk of “aligning AI with human values” but relatively little delineation of what these values are.
Ryan Gosling’s new film is a love letter to an under-appreciated art.
The increasingly political nature of cultural criticism does a disservice to the arts, to artists, and to criticism itself.
One of US television’s most experienced and talented writers has made a mess of Tom Wolfe’s second novel.
Directing physicians to treat their patients as racial statistics rather than an individuals is a grievous misdirection of their skills.
In the tenth instalment of ‘The So-Called Dark Ages,’ Herbert Bushman describes the epic 451 C.E. battle that pitted Attila the Hun against Gaul’s Roman and Gothic defenders.
The religious urge is born into nearly every child. And when we do not inherit a belief system, we build our own temples.