Arts & Entertainment
The Arts & Entertainment section explores facts, news, and opinions on various media, including music, films, TV shows, books, podcasts, influencers, and more!
Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities Episode 7 and 8 Review:
*Spoilers Ahead*
The finale of Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities is upon us, bringing two unique and engaging stories with it and providing excellent characterization, designs; this is the culmination of everything the anthology has been leading to. Although these episodes are nowhere near similar in plot, they deliver on every front—a worthy send-off to this anthology’s first season!
SOS: SZA’s new album will save our souls
For the first time since the release of her hit 2017 album Ctrl, contemporary R&B artist SZA has finally given the people what we have wanted and needed for so long—a new album. While this album takes great strides in SZA’s genre experimentation, there are moments aplenty where long-time SZA fans can catch her quintessential vulnerable lyricism, her effortlessly smooth rhythms, and her addictive sound.
Parasite Eve: The forgotten Christmas horror PS1 game
Parasite Eve is a unique entity in the larger gaming landscape. Released on Mar. 28, 1998 in Japan and Sep. 9, 1998 in North America by developer Square Soft, the game is part action role-playing game and part horror, centering around an apocalyptic event emerging in New York City. One plays as New York Police Department rookie Aya Brea as she chases down the all-powerful Eve who plans to destroy all humans via spontaneous combustion—bizarre premise for a Christmas game, right? Despite that, Parasite Eve is an intriguing and fast-paced adventure through an incredibly interesting premise, leaving the modern player wondering why its name goes so unheard in gaming history.
Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities episodes five and six review:
Episodes five and six of Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities demonstrate some of the best uses of settings and atmosphere in the entire series, offering two gothic tales that are bound to encapsulate any viewer’s attention by design alone.
The Songbird: Remembering Christine McVie
One of the most popular bands of the 70s and 80s hit something of a resurgence within the last several years, attributable to a number of reasons. A popular TikTok circulated with a man riding a skateboard, drinking cranberry juice, and listening to “Dreams” by Fleetwood Mac; Harry Styles performed live with the band as well as covered their hit song “The Chain.” Stevie Nicks continues to perform live with popular artists like Taylor Swift, Gorillaz, and more. Throughout this resurgence, one band member, responsible for a large portion of the band’s catalog, remained on the sidelines, out of the spotlight, and thus not credited nearly as much as deserved for making the band as successful as they were.
“The Mahogany Sailboat”
Ethan is a history major with an American Studies minor. His inspiration comes from many different 19th and 20th century novelists such as Joseph Conrad, Kurt Vonnegut, and Jane Austen, but the writer who has had the most profound effect on him is Ernest Hemingway.
Netflix’s Wednesday review
The new comedy horror show Wednesday debuted on Nov. 23, 2022. It rose to Netflix’s top ten list and is now number one on the United States charts. The story follows the famous character of Wednesday Addams, a nightmarish girl whose family decides to send her to Nevermore Academy for teens with strange powers, who finds herself in a mysterious situation involving her parents and an unsolved murder from twenty-five years prior. The show constantly unfolds new plot-twists in every episode, making the binge-watching so worthwhile. So far, the show has received excellent reviews, with a score of eight point five out of ten on IMDB and a sixty-nine percent rotten tomatoes rating. I started watching it a couple of days after it came out and finished it two days later.
Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities Episode 3 and 4 review:
*Spoilers Ahead*
Episodes three and four of Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities series offer some of the most exciting and thought-provoking editions to the series so far, making these two entries not just a fun watch but something that will stick with the viewers long after the episode’s end. These are two of the most contrasting, diverse entries to the entire series and ones I find by far the most compelling of the anthology.
Top 10 Phil Collins songs (part one)
Phil Collins is one of the most successful pop musicians of the last fifty years, regardless of whether or not his name is as famous as other artists of his time. Coming from drummer-turned-singer in the band Genesis to breaking into his own solo career, Collins remains one of the highest selling artists of the last century. To put into perspective, Collins is one of three artists to sell 100 million albums in a band as well as solo, the other two artists being Michael Jackson of the Jackson 5 and Paul McCartney of The Beatles.
Movie review: My Policeman
As a religious Harry Styles fan, I, like many others, was very excited for My Policeman to come to Prime Video. Although Styles received questionable reviews for his performance in the major blockbuster film Don’t Worry Darling earlier this fall, I was optimistic that he could rise to the occasion; however, this hopefulness may have been due to my natural affinity to him as an artist, as well as the numerous TikTok edits from the movie on my “For-You-Page” that signaled a relatively high viewer satisfaction rate.
Lamron Lit Corner: The Gunslinger and the beginning of Stephen King’s Dark Tower
Though Stepehen King has become synonymous with horror throughout his decades-long career, the more intense fans of his will know that horror is in no way his only genre. Is it his most popular? Sure, but like many readers and writers-to-be, the love for the craft came from a variety of sources, one being fantasy. As King says in his introduction essay for his seven-novel-long Dark Tower series, “On Being Nineteen,” he was inspired by an author many know and love: “J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings was madly popular in those days, [...] I suppose I was at least a halfling-hippie. Enough of one, at any rate, to have read the books and fallen in love with them. The Dark Tower books, like most long fantasy tales written by men and women of my generation [...], were born out of Tolkien’s.”
Writer’s Spotlight: Mollie McMullan
Mollie McMullan is a sophomore. She receives inspiration from poets like Warsan Shire, Olivia Gatwood, and Richard Siken, and often writes with a feminist lens. When she’s not in class, she can often be found visiting the turtle in the ISC Greenhouse.
The Return of NaNoWriMo and Why You Should Participate!
Have you ever thought to yourself, “Wow, I really want to start writing more, but I haven’t been given that push to kickstart that process”; or, maybe you just want to keep track of the continual progress you’re making within your own work? Well, look no further for a solution to your ponderings! This month both the English Department and the Creative Writing Club have decided to participate in “National Novel Writing Month.” You are in no way mandated to write a novel this month; we have extended it to be somewhat flexible, allowing you to write a novella, a briefer work. However, this does not require you to complete a piece, but rather acts as an intensification to get some ground covered!
Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities episode two review
As the weeks go on and the thought of Halloween leaves the minds of most, Guillermo del Toro has arrived to deliver another memorable and jarring experience to his viewers through his new series Cabinet of Curiosities. As each episode continues, the anthology continuously delivers, ramping up the stakes and offering a unique directing experience that will stick with most viewers. Vincenzo Natali, the director of this episode, uses several camera angles and color pallets to create a distinct experience from what was offered in the first episode. This is an overall more enjoyable episode than the first, offering viewers a lot more when it comes to storytelling and protagonist relatability. Before I go any further, this remarkable experience will keep you engaged throughout the sixty-minute runtime—so beware, there are minor spoilers ahead!
Dune Messiah: How to write the perfect sequel
This article contains spoilers for Frank Herbert’s first Dune novel.
Think of the most famous sequels to ever grace storytelling: The Empire Strikes Back, Terminator 2, Catching Fire, Lord of the Rings; what do they all have in common? They all build upon their predecessors in meaningful ways. But when it comes to Dune Messiah, the question instead is what do they not have in common, as Frank Herbert drastically reimagined and reinvented the characters, world, and conflicts that the first Dune novel brought to the table.
The Elder Scrolls V Skyrim: Stormcloaks or Imperials?
Anyone who has played the popular video game Skyrim is familiar with the controversial debate of which side of the war to fight for. For reference, Skyrim is a country in the Elder Scrolls universe inspired by medieval northern Europe. During the time the game is set in, Skyrim is at the very beginning of a brutal civil war. Here’s the breakdown of what happened:
Album review: Being Funny In A Foreign Language
As a long-time listener of The 1975, I was cautiously excited when the Spotify notification came up for the release of their new album, Being Funny In A Foreign Language. Because the sound of The 1975 has been known to vary quite a bit from album to album (sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse), I approached the album with a careful optimism, not too hopeful that it would exceed any expectations while simultaneously praying that this would not be the album to flop and get The 1975 booted from the classic indie-pop-rock rotation. Pleasantly, my expectations for Being Funny In A Foreign Language were appropriately exceeded.
Geneseo Theater Department presents powerful staged reading of My Body, No Choice in collaboration with Arena Stage
On Oct. 29, the SUNY Geneseo Theater Department presented a one-night-only staged reading of My Body, No Choice, in collaboration with Arena Stage. The play is a series of monologues that features five characters and their individual struggles with navigating the world’s present realities surrounding bodily autonomy.