For his first non-American subject, documentary filmmaker Ken Burns chose Renaissance polymath Leonardo da Vinci.
The celebrated documentarian turns his lens on the great Renaissance polymath, with mixed results.
Residents packed into an art gallery for a book signing to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Air Force Museum Saturday.
The story, titled “Here,” opens in one corner of a room, which remains as the backdrop of each successive scene. The years ...
Taking on Werner Herzog's dismissal of AI filmmaking, Piotr Winiewicz's IDFA opener 'About a Hero' is more puckish than ...
Belgium marked Canada’s Indigenous Veterans Day with a national ceremony honoring the estimated 4,000 Indigenous soldiers who ...
The historical drama film from director Sean McNamara ( Reagan) is set to hit theaters Jan. 24, 2025, with distribution from ...
A climate change activist who dumped red powder on a case containing the original copy of the U.S. Constitution was sentenced on Friday to two years in prison for his role in the ...
Winning school's art museum will display a prominent piece from its rival's collection for the remainder of the 2024-25 ...
REVIEW — At first glance, Portraits of Ukraine appears to be a standard coffee table book, strangely out of place in a venue ...
Keep your eyes peeled for celebrities roaming Cincinnati as shooting for this film is expected to wrap up ahead of ...
Authors of the book 'Wyatt Earp The Lost Photograph and the Disturbing Truth' reached out to historians to authenticate the ...