Inside the Durham Cinematheque, a hidden gem of local film
By Jessica Williams | February 28, 2018Take a look inside the passion project of local filmmaker Tom Whiteside, a haven for analog film.
Take a look inside the passion project of local filmmaker Tom Whiteside, a haven for analog film.
When I was 12 years old, the only thing I wanted was the opportunity to read a book written by Stephen King.
Roger Beebe, who received his Ph.D. in Literature at Duke in 2000, came back to campus last Wednesday to present four of his multi-projector films at the Bryan Center’s Griffith Film Theater.
Durham’s own Carolina Theatre is well-known in the community for its special film programming, including their Retro Film Series, the NC Gay + Lesbian Film Festival and the upcoming Anime-Magic Film Series, to name a (small) few.
Although she releases music under the name U.S. Girls, Meghan Remy is something of an outsider to her native country.
Where is the line between entertainment and art? This was the question that came up in my conversations with Bill Brown and Sabine Gruffat, two experimental filmmakers and professors at UNC-Chapel Hill who are organizing the Cosmic Rays Film Festival.
Last Wednesday, our men’s basketball team blew out Louisville 82-56, but that wasn’t the only reason the game was important to me.
Titus Andronicus are no stranger to ambition. After their 2010 release “The Monitor,” a stunning concept album that used the Civil War as a lens for personal growth, and their 2017 rock opera “The Most Lamentable Tragedy,” it’s difficult to imagine a more hefty offering.
It’s that time of the year again: dark circles under the eyes, pale lips, risks of caffeine overdose, packed libraries, take-out boxes on every desk and — for some — even sleeping in Perkins.
If you got on a bus with only one other person on board, would you sit down next to them? Probably not, right?
When sophomore Lucas Tishler hears music, he says he can see the notes in front of him.
Valentine’s Day at Duke University is like viewing a typical Wednesday through rose-colored glasses.
Last Wednesday, Cole Heathcott, a student at the Fuqua School of Business, released a music video for one of the songs in his new album, “American Love,” which will be released on Mar. 1.
Unlike the superhero fluff we’ve come to expect, “Black Panther” has ascended to a level of cultural phenomenon unmatched by its predecessors.
Monday night, amid the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements, women from all sectors of Duke came together for Believe Her, a discussion on gender violence on campus.
A few weeks ago, an order for 25 three-by-five Shutterfly photo prints arrived at my door.
Tuesday night, the Durham Co-op Market hosted the first of a series of film screening events. Visitors saw a short film called “Ugly & Wild: Learning to Love N.C. Fish.”
On the last day of each month, Duke plays host to a few more tents — but not in K-Ville.
Entering The Carrack last week, it would have been difficult for even the most experienced of gallery-goers to withhold amazement.
“You can’t be friends with me until you’ve watched Quentin Tarantino’s ‘Kill Bill.’”