Movies
Win a Stay at a Castle Fit for "Beauty and the Beast"
Though it's a Scottish castle, not French château, it's sure to be a fairytale trip
Meet the Historically Accurate Mr. Darcy
A team of experts on fashion and social culture offer their take on Jane Austen's brooding hero
Meet the Inner Circle That Runs Groundhog Day
They've been holding the ceremony in Gobbler’s Knob every year since 1887
Remembering Paul Robeson, Actor, Sportsman and Leader
Among other things, Robeson transformed one of history’s most famous showtunes into a protest song
Happy Birthday to Hollywood’s First Chinese-American Star
She was a leading lady, but racism held her career back
Meet the Men Behind Saturday Morning's Most Memorable Cartoons
Zoinks! Hanna-Barbera once dominated kids’ Saturday schedules
Without This Camera, the Emerald City Would Have Been the Color of Mud
That dramatic Dorothy in Oz moment was brought to you in living color by the DF-24 Beam Splitter
When the Serendipitously Named Lovings Fell in Love, Their World Fell Apart
The new film captures the quiet essence of the couples’ powerful story, says Smithsonian scholar Christopher Wilson
The Crazy Tricks Early Filmmakers Used To Fake Snow
Cornflakes, flour and, uh, asbestos were all used in early movies
Why Do We Love Period Dramas So Much?
Gone With The Wind, the highest-grossing period drama ever, premiered on this day in 1939
How Dorothy's Ruby Slippers Came to the Smithsonian
A successful Kickstarter Campaign funds efforts to bring back their sparkle and keep them ruby
Wonder Woman's UN Ambassadorship Is Already Coming to an End
The super hero's tenure as an advocate for empowering women and girls ends after less than two months
Dorothy's Ruby Slippers Were Originally Silver
Bright red is how we remember them, but Dorothy's famous shoes had another look at the start
Does the Linguistic Theory at the Center of the Film ‘Arrival’ Have Any Merit?
We asked a Smithsonian linguist and an anthropologist to debate the matter
How the Story of 'Moana' and Maui Holds Up Against Cultural Truths
A Smithsonian scholar and student of Pacific Island sea voyaging both loves and hates the new Disney film
How Accurate Is the Movie “Allied”?
The best spies won’t leave behind an evidence trail, but then how will audiences know what’s true and what’s fiction?
American TV Watchers Spend Over a Year of Their Life Channel Surfing
As options of shows and ways to watch them increase, so does the time it takes to find something to watch
Explore the Flickering, Forgotten Past of African-Americans in Silent Film
An estimated 80 percent of silent movies with all-black casts are thought to be lost, but a new project is making sure the people who made them aren't
The Exorcist's Rule Book
A serious manifestation of evil is never a pretty thing, but Catholic priests face down demons with precision
Killers Don't Always Look the Part
The tragic true story of an innocent man suspected of murder is a classic motif of the Hollywood thriller and is used as a subplot in Scream
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