Wes Anderson’s Movie Asteroid City Explores a Greater Frontier Than the Wild West: Humanity
Asteroid City gives us a new color palette from filmmaker Wes Anderson: the Wild West. But it also goes far beyond that.
Asteroid City gives us a new color palette from filmmaker Wes Anderson: the Wild West. But it also goes far beyond that.
Sydney Sweeney leads the cast in Reality, about a former U.S. intelligence specialist sentenced for leaking an intelligence report about the 2016 presidential election.
Whether you want to celebrate with soul music, have some soul food, or reflect on African art, DFW has every kind of Juneteenth event this week.
This week’s best DFW events include several celebrations for Juneteenth, Pride Month and Fathers’ Day, live productions of “Grease” and “Fly By Night” and a chance to quench your thirst with some classic cocktails.
The filmmaking power couple behind classics such as “1917” talked Oscars and movie tricks during a weekend of events in Dallas.
Here’s a list of hotels for Charlie Kirk and other conservatives should avoid like he avoids common sense.
The man who invented Flamin’ Hot Cheetos deserves to be knighted. But at the very least, a biopic directed by Eva Longoria.
All dads are different. Some like staying at home and relaxing with a good movies. Others can’t be contained no much how much duct tape it takes to keep them in one place. Here’s a guide to the best things to do in Dallas on Father’s Day for every type of father out there.
If you follow comedy at all, then your social media feeds are filling up with clips, ads and tasteful shirtless pics of comedian Matt Rife. If you’re not a youngin’ and/or think Tiktok is a deep state globalist counterinsurgency of some kind, you’re probably wondering, “Who in the hell is Matt Rife and why should I care?”
Sasha Calle says her take on Supergirl, the Kryptonian cousin of the mighty Superman from the DC Comics Universe, doesn’t let the “girl” in her name rule her identity even if her performance in The Flash totally rules.
The nights are warming up and Pride Month continues. With Fan Expo, Pride in Bloom and Alamo’s drag brunch, you can celebrate all of it. Here’s our list of best events in Dallas this week.
Film festivals are finally getting back to full steam and one that’s been ahead of that viral recuperating curve is the Oak Cliff Film Festival. The annual film gathering in the historic movie house that runs from Wednesday, June 21-Sunday, June 25 brings some of the most interesting and unique cinema experiences, most of which you won’t get a chance to see anywhere else on a big screen the way they were meant to be seen.
Between the drag bills, book bans and Bud Light and Target boycotts, it’s been a big year for bigotry. But Dallas showed out to celebrate the LGBTQ+ community at Double Wide and other venues.
Since 1962, this old-school gem has been a must-stop shop for photography enthusiasts.
When Carlie Alaniz applied to the Roots Markets open marketplace to sell her custom designed flower pots and started selling her wares over the Mothers’ Day weekend, she had no idea how the markets’ owners truly felt about the LGBTQ+ community.
The team that made the Meta Quest 2’s most popular virtual basketball game has released a new patch that adds all of the NBA’s home courts to the game.
Four years ago, the esports show Dreamhack decided to give Dallas a try after growing out the only space available in Austin for its annual gaming tournaments. It returns this weekend and the city is recognizing its efforts to making competitive gaming available in Dallas.
As a non-profit, The Moth is dedicated to storytelling. The organization celebrates the human experience as told by those actual humans, and it even helps those humans learn to better express themselves.
The horror director who never met a scare he didn’t like now has a movie theater in Dallas named after him thanks to the Alamo Drafthouse movie theater chain.
A Dallas fanzine that examined “Twin Peaks,” attempted to unravel the mysteries of David Lynch and Mark Frost’s subversive murder mystery years after its cancellation.
Television has an interesting ability to take large sets on a studio and shrink them down to something that doesn’t take up much space in a home but can still feel like a regular part of it.
Fans always say stuff like “I’d give my right arm” for this and “I’d give my left nut” for that. But would they?