Spotlight on Light House Studio
By Caroline Lee | February 8, 2024Through its programs and projects, Light House Studio is able to uphold its mission of fostering collaboration, creativity and community through film.
Through its programs and projects, Light House Studio is able to uphold its mission of fostering collaboration, creativity and community through film.
This spring, two Media Studies professors debuted innovative ways of bringing leisure content into academic discussion.
Viewers will witness an emotion-filled account of three demigods navigating the challenges of their unique world.
When asked about why Swift’s music brings people together, the Swifties at U.Va. pointed to nostalgia and the license to fully experience emotion.
"Emerging Narratives: Black Queer Youth in Literature and Theory," a class of Tichara Robertson's design, will focus on literature that centers LGBTQ+ Black characters, particularly in middle-grade and young-adult novels.
Since the group's formation in 2006, its members have been dedicated to making dance styles like Salsa, Bachata, Cha Cha and Merengue accessible, giving those who want to learn a space to do so right here in Charlottesville.
Here are some upbeat pop rock suggestions to get your semester started on an energized note and remind you of the warmer days ahead.
“Mean Girls” is a quirky and colorful reincarnation of its predecessors, but it loses freshness by blaring brand deals and attempting to appeal to a Gen-Z audience.
Uchis shows the sheer power behind her vocals as she belts her journey towards personal growth and self-love.
The Golden Globe Awards kicked off the Hollywood awards season Sunday night with the first major event since the SAG-AFTRA and WGA strikes.
To start your 2024 off, consider peering into the past with these three historical fiction books that will shape your outlook on the year ahead.
In a self-conscious and shamelessly cinematic combination of black-and-white and color film, “Maestro” paints a portrait of the legendary composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein, played by Cooper himself.
Now, a multi-camera recording of the stage musical brings “Waitress” to movie theaters for a limited screening, offering a wider audience a taste of the original show’s charm.
Based on the 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray, Yorgos Lanthimos’ newest film “Poor Things” is a thoughtful exploration of freedom, autonomy and liberation.
The Charlottesville community gathered at the Ting Pavilion on Friday evening to watch the Isabel Bailey Band, a folk-rock ensemble out of Richmond.
Performed last week in the Helms Theatre as part of the Virginia Theatre Festival, the play follows the romance between Jack Ludwig — a World War II military doctor — and Louise Rabiner, an aspiring actress.
In her debut novel “Fireflies and Zeroes,” Liz Larson shares the shimmering firefly-like charm of Charlottesville alongside the city’s flaws, its zeroes.
Dramatic as it is educational, Nolan provides an authentic portrayal of The Manhattan Project and goes above and beyond by displaying the scrutiny Oppenheimer faced from the U.S. government after WWII.
The film is admirably so open and blunt about the struggles of girlhood and growing up.
Regardless of the distance or obstacles presented before him, Mathiang has consistently used his voice to impede social injustice.