BuddyLove is making a splash in the breakdancing scene of SLC. SLUG had some time to talk about one essential part of what makes him who he is today: his style. … read more
SLUG Style: BuddyLove
BuddyLove is making a splash in the breakdancing scene of SLC. SLUG had some time to talk about one essential part of what makes him who he is today: his style. … read more
Rather than obscuring meaning, Valhalla captivates the listener before punching them in the face with a straightforward sentiment difficult to misinterpret. … read more
For 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, I don’t love the movie, but I also don’t totally hate it. Although the longer I sit with it, the more I start to hate it. … read more
GRASSHOPPER is deeply nostalgic — for a past we’ll never get back, for a future we may never reach, for an endless summer that lives inside our heads. … read more
Florence + the Machine’s Everybody Scream is full of breathless pleas, praying and preaching from the realms of reality and depths of imagination meld together. … read more
As Sundance leaves Park City, Nein hopes the legacy remembered is not only institutional but deeply rooted in place. … read more
Dre Rage Tv’s catchy songs, paired with an edgy, nerdy, Dax Flame-esque angle, feel like they were tailor-made for the people of the internet. … read more
Korean cinema has gained a lot of attention in America ever since Parasite in 2019, and No Other Choice shares similar aspects like slapstick humor and horror. … read more
Is This Thing On? shows a comic drifting through the carefully managed calm of an amicable divorce while quietly avoiding the deeper emotional fallout. … read more
Anna Boden, Jared Hess and Ira Sachs have had prolific careers and varied filmographies, but also share Sundance as a launching pad for their dreams coming true. … read more
This album is precious. Like the title track and opener say, it is soft. It’s delicate. It’s a little hard to listen to if you aren’t in the throes of romance. … read more
The choice not to start off with a bang is a good one, as the show avoids falling into a “pit” of its own making by piling on too much and losing its sense of reality. … read more