film

  • Film Screening – Suicide: The Ripple Effect

      Created by Jeannette Carrington jcarrington@lc.edu

  • Classic Review: Frankenstein

    By Jacob Reese jreese@lc.edu   For this semester’s third (and final) Classic Review, I have decided to do something different. Instead of reviewing an old movie I will be talking about an old book, the…

  • Film Review – “The Pruitt-Igoe Myth”

    By Jordan Jones jordanjones@lc.edu “You go to a movie to see some type of story… movies make us feel,” Chad Freidrichs, director of the documentary “The Pruitt-Igoe Myth” said Thursday night after a full screening…

  • Classic Review: Citizen Kane

    By Jacob Reese jtreese@lc.edu   If there could only be one movie deemed the most influential film of all time, it would have to go to none other than “Citizen Kane.” “Citizen Kane” is a…

  • Remembering Baseless and Ludicrous Mass Killings

    Kezia Miller kezmiller@lc.edu   The students sat quietly, grieving and alarmed, as they learned of the violent crowds who killed more than 4,000 innocent souls. These people were murdered under a mask of false accusations…

  • Best Films of 2016

      Jesse Baalman Staff Writer Another year has gone by and with the Academy Awards tomorrow, Feb. 26, now is the time to celebrate the best films of 2016. 5. A Monster Calls J. A.…

  • Best Films of 2016

      Jesse Baalman Staff Writer Another year has gone by and with the Academy Awards tomorrow, Feb. 26, now is the time to celebrate the best films of 2016. 5. A Monster Calls J. A.…

  • ‘The Grand Budapest Hotel’ Fails to Impress

    Wes Anderson’s new film “The Grand Budapest Hotel,”an aesthetic wonder, dazzles viewers with big stars and fabulous cinematography, yet proves to be another vapid disappointment.