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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 ...
Robots turns 20 this year, having been released in 2005. While some fondly remember this classic story about mechanical characters in a world entirely populated by robots, unfortunately it's often ...
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.
A Return to Intimacy and Reflection After a break and relocation to Korea in 2024, Michelle Zauner—aka Japanese Breakfast—returns with For Melancholy Brunettes (& Sad Women). A soft and whimsical ...
Self-determined and self-assured, Max (Ruaridh Mollica) is a 25-year-old writer from Edinburgh who has moved to London to pursue a career in writing. Here he freelances for Wall Magazine, while also ...
Self-determined and self-assured, Max (Ruaridh Mollica) is a 25-year-old writer from Edinburgh who has moved to London to pursue a career in writing. Here he freelances for Wall Magazine, while also ...
What are the best Fugazi songs? Where does one even start with Fugazi? Well, firstly, Fugazi isn’t just a band—they’re a movement. The Washington, D.C. post-hardcore pioneers redefined independent ...
Pavement never set out to be the defining band of ‘90s indie rock, but they were. Emerging from Stockton, California, with an effortless but intentional lo-fi sound, they created a blueprint for an ...
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