Arts + Entertainment
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7 Oscar-Winning Horror Films With Powerful Messages
The horror genre has historically faced challenges in gaining recognition at prestigious awards like the Oscars. However, recent years have seen a amazing shift, with several horror films not only receiving nominations but also winning Academy Awards.
By Ninfa Galeanoabout 3 hours ago in Horror
Good Will Hunting
How a Film About a Math Genius Became a Story About Emotional Courage THE SCENE THAT HEALED MILLIONS 😢 There is a moment in "Good Will Hunting" that has been watched, rewatched, quoted, memed, parodied, and discussed more than almost any other scene in the history of cinema, and its power has not diminished in the nearly three decades since the film's release in 1997 because it addresses a wound so common and so deeply hidden that most people do not recognize it as a wound until they watch Robin Williams say five words to Matt Damon and feel something break open inside them that they did not know was sealed shut, and those five words, "It's not your fault," repeated with increasing gentleness as Will Hunting's defensive armor cracks and crumbles and the boy who was beaten by his foster parents and who has spent his entire life protecting himself from vulnerability by weaponizing his intellect finally allows himself to feel the pain he has been running from since childhood, produce in audiences a cathartic response so consistent and so intense that therapists have reported clients citing this scene as the moment they decided to seek help for their own unprocessed trauma 🎬
By The Curious Writerabout 3 hours ago in Beat
The Library Card
Step Inside Any Story You've Ever Read THE CARD THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING 🃏 Twelve-year-old Zara Okafor found the library card tucked inside a returned copy of "A Wrinkle in Time" at the Greenville Public Library where she spent every afternoon after school because her mother worked double shifts at the hospital and the library was the only safe place within walking distance of her school, and Zara who had read every book in the young adult section twice and who had moved on to the adult fiction shelves with the precocious hunger of a child whose real life was too small for her imagination, picked up the card assuming it had been left by the previous borrower and intending to turn it in at the front desk, but when she looked at the card she noticed it was different from the standard Greenville library cards which were plain white with a barcode, because this card was made of something that felt like metal but flexed like paper, and it was warm to the touch despite having been inside a closed book, and instead of a name and barcode it contained a single line of text in gold lettering that read "Present this card to enter any book you choose" 📖
By The Curious Writerabout 3 hours ago in Fiction
The Clock
What Would You Do If You Knew Exactly When? THE DEVICE NOBODY ASKED FOR 🕐 The Countdown Clock appeared in every home on Earth simultaneously at midnight on January first without explanation or warning, a small digital display that materialized on the wall of every bedroom in every house and apartment and shelter and prison cell on the planet showing a number counting backward in real-time, and it took humanity approximately three hours to understand what the numbers represented because the first people whose clocks reached zero died instantly and peacefully at the exact moment their display hit 00:00:00:00, and the worldwide panic that followed as eight billion people simultaneously confronted personalized death countdowns that could not be removed, covered, or destroyed because any attempt to damage or obscure a clock resulted in it immediately reappearing on the nearest wall, was the most destabilizing event in human history, more disruptive than any war or pandemic because it gave every person on Earth the one piece of information that human psychology is least equipped to handle: the exact moment of their death 💀
By The Curious Writerabout 3 hours ago in Fiction
























