• Alex Garland's Controversial Drama 'Civil War' Imagines a War-Torn America

    For those of us who love A24, Civil War is a milestone: It earned the quirky indie distributor its highest opening weekend box office to date. Granted, built-in controversy surely drew many viewers to this dystopian drama from English writer-director Alex Garland (Men, Annihilation, Ex Machina), which depicts a U.S. civil war in the present day. The deal We join said war already well in progress. It all appears to have started when the unnamed U.S. president (Nick Offerman) decided he...

  • There are signs America could be sleepwalking into civil war

    "Some have suggested that modern America doesn’t have issues sufficiently contentious to provide such a spark. I’m not so sure."

  • Civil War

    Civil War Dir. Alex Garland, U.S./U.K., A24. The 15-year-old me would have

  • Fewer fatalities in the Civil War than War of Independence, new research suggests

    The Irish Civil War Fatalities Project, launched today, lists all of the combatant and civilian fatalities in the Irish Civil War.

  • 'Civil War' is a movie. Putin's pals want a real war between the states

    The dystopian thriller “Civil War” has been the No. 1 film at the U.S. box office for the last two weekends. But viewers, liberals and conservatives alike, should be aware that Russian leader Vladimir Putin’s propagandists are hoping that a second American Civil War actually happens. After the House approved the $61 billion Ukraine aid package on Saturday, the hawkish former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, who is the deputy chairman of Russia’s security council, wrote on Telegram: “I cannot...

  • How America’s Military-Industrial Complex Wins All of Its Wars Against America’s Taxpayers

    Eric Zuesse (blogs at https://theduran.com/author/eric-zuesse/) As has been documented by such authorities on U.S. military spending as Winslow T. Wheeler, Robert Higgs, and others, America spends each year around $1.5 trillion for its military but hides at least around $800 billion of it (so as for the U.S. not to be publicly recognized as spending […]

  • The Civil War in Charleston

    Erik Larson offers in his latest work a close look at slavery, antebellum Charleston, and the cause of the War of the Rebellion.

  • A Movie That Might Be Worse Than Civil War

    The new film Civil War is a historic cinematic achievement. British director Alex Garland has made a movie that might be worse than a real American civil war. Perhaps that was Garland’s intention. His film is a series of horrifying set pieces—Abu Ghraib-style torture by gas station attendants, government aerial bombings of civilians, summary execution of journalists, a massive California and Texas invasion of Washington, D.C.—that seem to add up to a warning. If we don’t steer away from our...

  • The 'Civil War' AI controversy, explained

    A24 used AI-generated posters of war-torn American cities to promote Alex Garland's "Civil War," and audiences are not happy.

  • Pope prays for peace in all war-torn countries

    Shafaqna English-Pope Francis called for prayer for peace in all war-torn countries. Speaking before the recitation of the Regina Coeli prayer after Holy Mass in Venice on Sunday, the Pope said that “I am thinking of Haiti, where a state of emergency is in force and the population is desperate

  • What 'Civil War' Gets Right (and Wrong) About Photojournalism

    Civil War eschews the typical trappings of a combat action movie by turning the lens not toward the soldiers but to the photographers capturing them. And while it excels in some aspects of its portrayal, it falters when it comes to the big stuff. [Read More]

  • 'Civil War' – Raw, Original and Utterly Pointless

    Alex Garland wasn't kidding. The writer/director of 'Civil War' said his dystopian thriller didn't take political sides. The film bears that out, focusing entirely on journalists scrambling to cover a country at war with itself. The problem? 'Civil War' isn't action-packed in a traditional, rah-rah sense. Nor does it shed new light on what it means to be a war correspondent. What's left? Visceral moments and the sense that almost anything can happen on screen. Like Garland's previous film 'Men,'...