DURA homepage
Skip main navigation menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • A-Z
  • Submissions
Skip main content
Featured image of Blackfish

Blackfish

Inspired by an incident at SeaWorld Orlando in which an Orca Whale attacked and killed its trainer, Blackfish originated from director Gabriella Copperthwaite’s desire to understand what might cause a highly intelligent animal to “bite the hand that feeds”. The result is a fascinating and tragic documentary that explores the intimate yet uneasy relationship between Read More

Featured image of The World’s End

The World’s End

Alienation seems to be the prevailing theme throughout director Edgar Wright’s Three Flavours Cornetto trilogy. After the everyman saviour of the world in Shaun of the Dead (2004) (the “Strawberry” Cornetto) and the exceptional cop thrown into a village of corruption represented in Hot Fuzz (2007) (the “Original” blue), Wright and co-writer Simon Pegg tackle Read More

Featured image of The Woman who Walked into the Sea

The Woman who Walked into the Sea

Cal McGill is back. The sea detective, introduced in the eponymous novel of 2011, gets involved in a second adventure that brings together old and new family models, suppressed secrets, unrequited love and the mysteries of the ocean. In a crowded market, authors of crime or mystery fiction have to try ever harder to make Read More

Featured image of Wadjda

Wadjda

Wadjda is a film by Saudi Arabia’s first female director, Haifaa Al-Mansour. The plot revolves around a young Saudi girl called Wadjda who is trying to discover herself, questioning her place in society as a result. Wadjda is the first film to have been made by a woman within Saudi Arabia, and as such, proved Read More

Featured image of The Rice Paper Diaries

The Rice Paper Diaries

Connoisseurs of literary novels are sometimes known to have a somewhat sniffy attitude towards genre fiction. But what happens when literary novels themselves become generic and derivative? Take Francesca Rhydderch’s debut novel, The Rice Paper Diaries for example. Set primarily in Hong Kong before and during the Japanese invasion, and in Wales in the years Read More

Featured image of The Making of Her

The Making of Her

Susie Nott-Bower’s debut novel, The Making of Her, is a meditation on contemporary media perceptions of ageing, menopause and celebrity. It sets out to question how television reflects the values of a globalised consumer culture and how, in its turn, influences attitudes concerning body-image, gendered identities and aesthetic perceptions. These issues are mediated through the Read More

Featured image of Late Breaking

Late Breaking

A.E. Stringer’s third collection, Late Breaking, can perhaps best be described as a volume of visual poetry, largely focussed as it is on descriptions of the world around him, encompassing painted landscapes, animal encounters or more general musings on aspects of popular culture. Throughout the collection, these poems remain descriptive works, disinterested in any larger Read More

Featured image of Frances Ha

Frances Ha

If one could distill films into particular formulas, the equation in this case might read: (Woody Allen x Jean-Luc Godard) – existentialism = the contemporary New York bourgeois comedy, Frances Ha. Noah Baumbach’saesthetically appealing film is at once a homage to, and a film inspired by,the style of French independent filmmakers and, by allowing audiences Read More

Featured image of Ethiopia Boy

Ethiopia Boy

save me from the demon who jumps out of the third graveyard and eats the memories of children. (“Small nervous prayer”) This dark image is perhaps typical of what Ethiopia conjures for today’s European reader. Too recent spectres of drought, famine and attendant griefs cast long shadows over a culturally rich land; its ancient wonders, Read More

Featured image of The Church of Omnivorous Light: Selected Poems

The Church of Omnivorous Light: Selected Poems

The delight of any selected works should be variety and range. The Church of Omnivorous Light, the first volume of Wrigley’s to be published in the UK, does not disappoint. Drawn from over thirty years of poetic output, Wrigley’s voice encompasses: the natural and the social, the personal and the public, the sensual and the Read More

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 194
  • 195
  • 196
  • 197
  • 198
  • …
  • 224
  • Next Page »
DURA facebook page

Copyright © 2025 DURA :: Dundee Review of the Arts (DURA)