News

Dirt Flirt speaks to Robyn Homeniuk about her self-titled debut EP, how she developed her sound, and how queerness shapes her ...
Film Ireland, supported by Coimisiún na Meán, have announced the second edition of their Journalism Mentorship Programme, designed to empower writers from a wide variety of backgrounds. Over the ...
Irish Wish (2024) is nobody's idea of a good movie, but it's immeasurably better than Four Letters of Love (2024), Polly Steele's exhaustingly silly adaptation of Niall Williams's book of the same ...
Jonathan Boylan interviews actor/writer John Doran on recent short The Assassination of Michael D. Higgins, and his varied ...
Have you ever wondered why your dog’s ears prick up even when you hear nothing? You sit reading the newspaper when Toby runs towards the door barking as if his best friend is outside. It could be ...
Diogenes was one of the more eccentric of the Greek philosophers. Homeless and irascible, scandalous and obscene, he still inspired later generations.
Anjette Lyles ran one of the most popular restaurants in Macon, Georgia. What would her guests have thought if they'd known about her penchant for poison?
With the remake of The Magnificent Seven hitting our screens, Stephen Porzio looks at the legacy of Sergio Corbucci, the legendary western director.
The Roman Republic was one of the first great democracies, an influence on the world to this day. And we owe it all to Tarquin the Proud, a king so bad that he made his people swear to have no kings ...
The Birth of Venus: How Botticelli focused more on the idealism of the female figure, along with mythology and symbolism in his secular pieces.
Todd Haynes’ Safe turns 30 this year, whilst undeniably relevant to dominant culture upon its release — often interpreted by viewers as an allegorical take on the AIDS crisis — it is exceedingly ...
They said nobody could escape from Macquarrie Harbour. Alexander Pearce managed it. But the details of his escape were literally too horrific to believe.