Go to the movies with DUU Freewater Presentations
By Jonathan Pertile | January 16, 2020The organization’s homepage on the DukeArts website is clear: “We show movies.”
The organization’s homepage on the DukeArts website is clear: “We show movies.”
“We all like to think of childhood as this time of joy and innocence. But for many of us, it’s just not true.”
In November 2019, Liberation Station’s Black Lit Library finally settled into its new host location at the Sarah P. Duke Gardens.
Adam Sandler is notorious for starring in bad films.
YouTube is where I go when I want to be entertained — effortlessly, thoughtlessly, mind-numbingly entertained.
For my senior thesis*, I have decided to study the vocal aberrations that are normalized during rushing season.
It’s time to take a look at the nominees and predict who should win (and who actually will) in the top categories.
Louisa May Alcott’s “Little Women” is a beloved Hollywood mainstay, and it has been adapted into film for nearly as long as the medium has existed.
Gone are the days when careers were a ladder.
“Overcome by events.” That was the phrase photojournalist Renée Jacobs used to describe how a coal mining fire came to decimate the rural Pennsylvania town of Centralia.
With her sophomore album “Romance,” Camila Cabello has provided a fantastically cohesive, entertaining work that is a thrill from start to finish.
Recess Managing Editor Will Atkinson chooses his five favorite releases of the year.
I avoided watching Netflix’s latest season of “The Crown” — not only so I could binge it over Thanksgiving break, but also because I was apprehensive about the major changes made to the cast of the Queen Elizabeth biopic series as it moved into a new era.
If the Internet hasn’t defined your idea of “Boomers” yet, allow artists of the generation to do it for you.
Every year, excited students arrive on Duke’s campus carrying luggage, boxes and many other personal items.
Writer-director Rian Johnson breathes life back into the “whodunit” with “Knives Out.”
“Frozen 2” opens with a song about everything staying the same.
As the 2010s come to a close, the Recess staff is looking back at the culture that defined the decade.
One of my favorite pieces I read in all my years of English classes was Albert Camus’s essay on the myth of Sisyphus.
Amid exams and final papers, Duke still has something to celebrate this week.