“Effaced…” A Poem by Jawdat Fakhreddine
“Effaced…” by Jawdat Fakhreddine translated by Huda Fakhreddine Effaced, our villages, squares and skies. Nothing remains but smoke, and fires roaming freely. Houses, gardens, fie…
“Effaced…” by Jawdat Fakhreddine translated by Huda Fakhreddine Effaced, our villages, squares and skies. Nothing remains but smoke, and fires roaming freely. Houses, gardens, fie…
After two more personal, retrospective feature films, the American filmmaker revisits his passion for extraterrestrials.
Iran's former supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, killed in US-Israeli strikes on Tehran late February, will be buried after Ashura, due to take place later this month, funeral…
Bafel Jalal Talabani, President of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), extends a message of condolence to the family and colleagues of the late journalist L
Oil prices slid about 3 per cent to a seven-week low on Tuesday after US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said he is seeing an increasing amount of traffic through the Strait of Horm…
France will also bar far-right Israeli Minister Bezalel Smotrich from entry as part of the measures, which Israel condemns as "disgraceful".
Pasta primavera is all about celebrating spring vegetables: asparagus, peas, zucchini (or whatever seasonal veg you love) folded into a glossy sauce made with cream, Parmesan, but…
Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu believed that victory over Iran would reshape the Middle East. The region is being reshaped. But not in the way they expected. The Islamic Repu…
Donald Trump sought to avoid both military escalation and making major concessions to Tehran and tried to prevent negotiations from breaking down, as Iran and Israel engaged in th…
Anthropic just announced Claude Fable 5, a new AI model it said is the most powerful model it has ever made widely available. According to the company, Fable 5 “shows exceptional …
Our cartoonist's take on the collapse of a deal between France and Germany to build a next-generation warplane
The Pope of Trash talks about Roger Ebert, the breadth of his film references, and two of his classics coming to Criterion.