Posts in Opinion
Disney’s Inside Out: A Movie - Or A Plausible Tool To Explain Mental Health To Children?

Yes, Pixar has created a film with laugh-out-loud moments and imaginative ideas, but what  it really does, more than that, is depict the reality of what it is to live. It takes a risk - and uses a  young person as their main character - and in doing so, invites older viewers to confront the fact that mental health can plague us from a young age. Moreover, for the younger viewers,  it gives one important message - it is normal and okay to struggle. It gives shape to these  scary abstract emotions. 

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OpinionJessica Blackwell
Despite The Reviews, The Assembly Does A Disservice to Autistic People

You’ve probably guessed by now that the premise of The Assembly is where a group of autistic, neurodivergent and learning disabled people interview celebrities. I appreciate its heart is in the right place, and I don’t want to tear it apart completely. Except I do. It’s 2025 and it feels incredibly frustrating and disappointing to see disabled people treated like zoo animals. 

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I Saw the TV Glow : The Damage of Identity Repression and Importance of Expressionism

Jane Schoenbrun’s freshman feature We’re All Going to the World’s Fair released in 2021. It is a film that captures what it meant to be a teenager growing up in the internet age, and the effect of the media consumed on one’s identity through a lo-fi horror aesthetic. This concept is developed further in their next film, 2024’s I Saw The TV Glow, swapping out the presence of internet access with that of nostalgic late night cable television. Within this lies the core identity of the film: the damage caused from the repression of identity, and more importantly, why the expressionism of oneself is important.

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The White Lotus on Business: Is Spirituality a Refuge or a Mirage for the Elite?

The White Lotus returns to the screen for another iconic season, transporting us all to Thailand. The first two seasons took place in Maui and Sicily, and this season sees the return of familiar faces, including Belinda and Greg (now going by Gary) from season one played by Natasha Rothwell and Jon Gries. If we know anything about Mike White, it is that he likes his characters messy, complicated, delusional, and even diabolical. The mess that you're about to witness this season will probably have you taking Lorazepam.

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OpinionJessica Blackwell
"Can a thirteen-year-old boy really be an incel?" - Adolescence Forces Us To Ask, What Are Our Teens Consuming Online?

“Adolescence” follows the story of a thirteen-year-old school boy, Jamie Miller, portrayed by Owen Cooper, after he is accused of stabbing and murdering Katie, another school girl in his year. Within the four episodes, we see the events carried out after the crime is committed, including his arrest and the effects it has on him, his family and other members of the community. 

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Opinion, TVGuest User
Female Pleasure in Film and TV

Throughout history, women have been told to sit down, be quiet and keep to yourself. Growing up, we are constantly told that sex is purely an act of procreation, that it’s something females should endure not enjoy. It is normalised to a point that we start looking at female pleasure as something wrong, especially self-pleasure. I mean women like sex – I sure do anyway!

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Film, OpinionGuest User
Females in Film: Breaking Through Traditions and Expectations

Since the beginning of the film and tv industry women have been pushed aside in roles that were traditionally dominated by men, such as directors, producers and writers. If we look back to the golden age of Hollywood, very rarely will you see a female working the camera, taking control of film direction and writing a hit. Many were leading ladies like Judy Garland, Vivian Leigh and Audrey Hepburn.

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Film, OpinionGuest User
Constructing South Asians On-Screen

There has been a slow emergence, and even slower recognition, of the South Asian presence in Western film and television media, which has met with a contemporary boom of South Asian faces and stories in the industries due to the crisis of (self-)representation. Somewhat missing from this ongoing public discourse around representation, however, is the reality of the ‘constructions’ underlying visual media representations.

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Film, OpinionGuest User
The Transition From Singer to Actor - Can Anyone Do It?

Beginning a career in law, Turkish born Yasmine has many talents. Scouted for TV when she was five years into her law career, she was then scouted for TV and began work as a news reporter before transitioning to acting and now writing. We caught up with her to discuss her new film, Anxious, which is currently making waves on the awards circuit and why putting mental health at the forefront of the film was important to her.

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Film, OpinionGuest User
Our Obsession with Women and Tragedy

It’s been almost a quarter of a century since that cataclysmic car accident in Paris took place. Why then, when so many years have elapsed since her death, was it not surprising to hear that yet another film focusing on the plight of the princess would be hitting our screens in the form of Spencer earlier this year? What is it about Diana that continues to inspire directors time and time again? I’d love to believe it was her daring sense of humour, her relentless approach to helping others or her killer wardrobe. However, it seems more likely that our society’s preoccupation with Princess Diana represents something much wider: a lingering obsession with women who have experienced tragedy.

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Film, OpinionGuest User
Saturday Night TV – But Not As We Know It

These are all classic 'primetime' Saturday night television shows that used to draw in viewers by their millions, but lost their places on our TV schedules after declining viewing figures led to their demise (or relegation from the terrestrial channels to satellite stations such as Challenge and Dave).

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TV, Opinion, FilmGuest User
My Favourite Christmas Film: The Snowman

I liked ‘The Snowman’ as a child, but not intensely. I remember the disappointment when my younger sister tore the reel out of our VHS tape to dance around the house wearing it as a cross-body handbag, but I don’t recall any great desire to watch it out of choice. However, in adulthood, ‘The Snowman’ has become a Christmas treasure to me.

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Film, OpinionGuest User