If you were a teenager in the 1990s (like me!), few things mattered to you like The Crow. The 1994 film captured goth/grunge cool. From its origins as an indie comic book to its legendary soundtrack to its tragic production, The Crow captured the mood of a generation. Which is
SEAGRASS: A Story of Japanese Identity and Collective History
There’s an excerpt from Janice Munemitsu‘s book The Kindness of Color that’s helpful for understanding Japanese-American cultural heritage, and I think it can be applied to Japanese Canadians as well. Japanese immigrants who are first-generation American residents are known as “Issei.” They typically spoke little English and maintained Japanese as
The Best Change in Netflix’s Avatar: The Last Airbender Isn’t What You Think
This article contains spoilers for Netflix’s Avatar: The Last Airbender. Any adaptation of a piece of art, especially if it’s beloved, is going to need to make changes. Netflix’s Avatar: The Last Airbender was no exception, especially with it adapting 20 episodes of an animated series to eight hour-long episodes
The Terrible Superhero That Is Somehow Owned by Both DC and Marvel
DC and Marvel have given the world some of the greatest characters in pop culture: Spider-Man, Batman, Superman, and D-Man (yes, some of us like D-Man). So if the two companies were to put their heads together and come up with a character that they could share, that character would
Why Is Starship Troopers Still So Misunderstood?
“You get me?” barks Career Drill Sergeant Zim (Clancy Brown). The young, beautiful, and vapid recruits giving him their full attention answer in kind: “Sir yes sir!” Johnny Rico (Casper Van Dien) and his fellow roughnecks might get Zim, but most people do not. Since its first theatrical run through