Virginia Film Festival offers free virtual all-access student passes
By Loree Seitz | October 17, 2020The 33rd Virginia Film Festival is offering free student passes to all of the festival's virtual events through the Art$ Program.
The 33rd Virginia Film Festival is offering free student passes to all of the festival's virtual events through the Art$ Program.
During their residency, students from the University — representing a host of majors and schools — will work in pairs during this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to study with the innovative dance group.
Despite the unusual circumstances brought by the pandemic, the festival will host a number of impressive guests on their online circuit.
With beautiful lyrics tackling tough themes, subtle acoustic instrumentation with a spattering of exciting electric guitar riffs and nine thoughtful, relatable songs, “Good Luck With Whatever” is the perfect representation of a band that's moving on and growing up.
The film will inevitably compel anyone who sees it to think meaningfully about what it means to witness and be a part of the lives of those they care about.
Filmed last summer in a pre-COVID-19 world, this may be one of Disney+’s only original releases for the rest of 2020 and, sadly, possibly years to come.
Following in the true crime footsteps of “Amanda Knox” and “Abducted in Plain Sight,” Netflix has done it again with a unique yet somber documentary about the true story of the Watts family murders case.
Today, let’s celebrate The Sundays — makers of the greatest song of all time, “When I’m Thinking About You."
Known for making saccharine pop ballads similar to that of Celine Dion, “The Rarities” exposes the woman that was always behind the facade.
Gold Connections' new EP "Ammunition" will drop November 16, featuring the newly released single "Stick Figures."
“The Great British Baking Show” provides the comfort, warmth and delectable baked goods everyone could use amidst the coronavirus pandemic.
The fourth season of "Fargo" appears to be the most complex and diverse season yet.
Sylvan Esso’s latest album “Free Love” paints love and life as simple, continuous and intimate.
Despite the underlying gloom that encapsulates so much of this album, there are also proclamations of compassion and optimism for the future.
Entering an exhibit knowing that you simply will not be able to fully comprehend the art is unfamiliar territory for many audiences, but that element is precisely what makes this show so refreshing.
Check out our three picks for the October edition of the A&E Book Club.
"Enola Holmes" has shaky execution that follows a wandering and tiresome plotline, but this is all forgivable, maybe even forgettable, due to Brown's performance.
As bizarre as the 2020 Emmy Awards would seem to somebody who suddenly arrived at our present coronavirus-laced moment from, for example, this time last year, many of the award winners were anything but surprising.
While "Antebellum" had the potential to spark important conversations about the persisting impacts of slavery and Black trauma, it ultimately falls flat and comes across as performative.
"Unpregnant" confronts controversy with an empowering abortion story.