Reading view

Exiled for an anti-war drawing: A Russian family punished for dissent

It is the moving story of a Russian father and daughter who opposed Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine. It all began in March 2022, when 12-year-old Maria drew an anti-war picture at school in response to the invasion launched a month earlier. She was immediately reported by those around her, and the FSB soon visited both her school and her home. Her father was eventually arrested for supporting his daughter and speaking out against the war. He was convicted of discrediting the Russian army. Following his release from a penal colony, he and Maria left Russia and are now refugees in Strasbourg. A report by Elena Volochine, English adaptation by Lauren Bain.

  •  

Mexican teachers expand protest camp and threaten to shut down the capital

CNTE teachers at the protest camp on the streets of the Historic Center in Mexico City on Tuesday.

Teachers in Mexico have launched a nationwide strike that is bringing mounting pressure on President Claudia Sheinbaum’s government ahead of the start of the soccer World Cup.

Seguir leyendo

© Nayeli Cruz

Teachers from the CNTE (National Coordination of Education Workers) demonstrating on Paseo de la Reforma.

© Nayeli Cruz

Members of the CNTE playing a game during Tuesday's demonstration.

© Nayeli Cruz (EL PAÍS)

Statues toppled by CNTE members.

© Nayeli Cruz

On Tuesday, the CNTE’s Single National Negotiating Commission attended a roundtable discussion with federal authorities at the Ministry of the Interior.
  •  

Alejandro González Iñárritu: ‘I know about US culture. They don’t know a damn thing about Mexican culture’

Alejandro González Iñárritu in Mexico City on May 27, 2026.

With five Academy Awards to his name, Alejandro González Iñárritu, 62, had few things left to achieve, and this week he crossed one off. The award-winning Mexican director, who will release his ninth film this fall — the dramedy Digger, starring Tom Cruise — has returned to his native city to join the Colegio Nacional de México, one of the most prestigious academic institutions in the Spanish-speaking world. As its new 38th member and the first filmmaker ever asked to join the honorary academy, his entire craft is also entering the institution: an art that has historically played different roles, he says, from “its use by governments for ideologies and repression” to “poetry and inspiration,” and also “entertainment.”

Seguir leyendo

Alejandro González Iñárritu filmmaker, screenwriter and Mexican producer.
  •  

Camila Morrone takes center stage, free from the shadow of her past relationship with Leonardo DiCaprio

As a child, Camila Morrone (Los Angeles, 28) found it odd when she heard her mother and father arguing and repeating the same lines over and over in her family living room. She later understood that her parents’ profession — they are both actors — required long hours of learning lines, rehearsing scripts, and attending auditions that did not always have the hoped-for outcome. The actress has said she grew to feel some aversion to acting during her teens, though deep down she knew it was the path she would follow.

Seguir leyendo

© Maya Dehlin Spach (WireImage)

Camila Morrone at the premiere of 'Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen,' March 19, 2026, in Los Angeles.
  •  

Anne Hathaway, Martin Scorsese, Charlie XCX... Hollywood lands on Letterboxd: An impossible romance?

In 2011, Karl von Randow and Matt Buchanan, two tech-loving New Zealand film buffs, launched Letterboxd, a movie review and rating app inspired by Goodreads, the platform that does the same for books. For several years, they juggled this small project with their work at a web design studio. Then came the Covid-19 pandemic. In March 2020, they hired their first full-time employee, and with the world confined to their homes, their user base exploded. In 2023, the company was acquired by the Canadian company Tiny and today boasts over 26 million user profiles. While this figure seems insignificant compared to companies like Instagram (with around three billion active users), it reflects the cultural power of film as a source of conversation. Those who love movies enjoy watching them as much as discussing and analyzing them in detail, and Letterboxd is aimed at that community — including famous filmmakers and performers.

Seguir leyendo

© photo: MPTV.net (Barry Wetcher)

Anne Hathaway in a scene from 'The Devil Wears Prada' (2006).
  •  
❌