YAM’s Top Films of 2012 Redux
We got together with all YAM Magazine writers and contributors to ask them how much their 2012 year in films had changed.
We got together with all YAM Magazine writers and contributors to ask them how much their 2012 year in films had changed.
Diego Luna helms a biopic of the civil-rights activist and labor organizer Cesar Chavez.
It’s been… maybe three months since I started out with Jenna’s Beginner’s Guide to Indian Cinema. What’s the journey been like?
A second trailer for Martin Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street has been unleashed online.
What Crazy Sexy Cool: The TLC Story does great is kicking your new-found TLC music binge.
Ron Howard’s Rush tackles the rivalry between drivers Niki Lauda and James Hunt during the 1976 Formula One season.
So many fascinating films this year have been written or co-written by women, and it’s about time we give a toast to this talented bunch.
Black is Bhansali’s Indian re-imagining of the Helen Keller story — in here, we follow Michelle McNally as she narrates the story of her life as a deaf and blind girl and the relationship with her teacher.
We’re nearly 3 months away from the end of the year, and though 2013 still seems to be a rather lackluster year (again), I had some time to look back at last year…
Set in 1985, National Security is based on the memoir by Kim Keun-tae, a democratic activist who was kidnapped and tortured for 22 days under the orders of gruesome police inspector Lee Geun-an, better known as The Undertaker.