Shakespeare’s Film Noir: Coen’s “The Tragedy of Macbeth”

By |2025-05-06T22:05:23-05:00May 6th, 2025|Categories: Dwight Longenecker, Film, Senior Contributors, William Shakespeare|

Joel Coen’s "The Tragedy of Macbeth" reminds us at a visceral level that the supernatural and the natural worlds are interwoven in a matrix of good and evil. When Macbeth dabbles in the occult, he lets loose the lords of darkness. A stark, new cinematic take on Macbeth is Joel Coen’s 2021 adaptation The Tragedy [...]

Why Altar Rails Are Returning to Churches

By |2025-05-06T09:52:58-05:00May 5th, 2025|Categories: Architecture, Beauty, Catholicism, Faith, John Horvat, Senior Contributors|

Faith must have its physical and visual expression. The return of the altar rail is a refreshing and sublime response to a distorted vision of the Church. It reintroduces the traditional teachings of the Church with awe and wonder, delighting the worshiper and resurrecting fervor for Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament. In churches across [...]

The “Wild and Terrible” Mozart

By |2025-05-02T10:04:46-05:00May 2nd, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Featured, Music, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|

"Too wild and terrible" is what Ludwig van Beethoven is reported to have said about Mozart's famous Requiem. And despite the popularity of this great, unfinished work, the "wild and terrible" side of Mozart has generally been obscured in the public mind, in favor of his seemingly "lighter" works: Eine Kleine Nachtmusik, the overture to [...]

Should Christians Watch “The Young Pope”?

By |2025-04-27T15:37:29-05:00April 27th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Culture, Film, Timeless Essays|

"The Young Pope" is unexpectedly different, painting a picture of the Vatican that is at once repulsive and frightening, yet also beautiful, mysterious, and at times even holy. Hollywood’s brush tends to paint the Vatican in colors dark and foreboding, a lavishly decorated place of simony and secret sexual sins. The papal throne is made [...]

Smoking as a Conservative Act

By |2025-04-22T12:54:07-05:00April 22nd, 2025|Categories: Conservatism, Culture|

Smoking tobacco is not of necessity one of the permanent things that conservatives should cherish, but it does symbolize an older way of life and a different sensibility. Choosing to smoke makes one immediately recognizable as one who is not “with the times.” The incarnational element of "lighting up" In a recent article for The Free Press, journalist [...]

The Reality of the Resurrection

By |2025-04-20T20:28:54-05:00April 20th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Culture, Dwight Longenecker, Easter, Gospel Reflection, Philosophy, Timeless Essays|

Too often we Christians have given in to the temptation to sanitize the crucifixion and sentimentalize the resurrection. But the resurrection was not, at first, a cause for rejoicing, but the source of fear—soul-shaking, knee-knocking, heart-pounding, earth-quaking fear. One of the good things about Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ is the gore. He [...]

The Classical Girl’s Top 10 Holy Works for Holy Week

By |2025-04-16T08:20:07-05:00April 15th, 2025|Categories: Arvo Pärt, Audio/Video, Easter, George Frideric Handel, Gustav Holst, Gustav Mahler, J.S. Bach, Lent, Music, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|

Here are ten glorious pieces of music for Holy Week that will remind you that there is beauty in this world. As a lifelong Catholic, I’ve always taken Holy Week seriously in a personal way, and the reading of “The Passion of the Lord” on Palm Sunday always deeply affects me. You’d think I’d never heard the [...]

Why Conservatives Must Support Liberal Education

By |2025-04-16T09:32:37-05:00April 15th, 2025|Categories: Classical Education, Conservatism, Culture, Liberal Learning, Russell Kirk, Western Civilization|

The task of conservation, in our present day, necessarily entails supporting liberal education. Those conservatives who do not support it will fail to conserve our Western identity. That is to say: they will fail to conserve anything significant, no matter how many tributes they pay to some abstract ideas of “freedom” or “liberty.” I’d like [...]

The Faith of E.E. Cummings

By |2025-04-15T17:46:46-05:00April 14th, 2025|Categories: Dwight Longenecker, Faith, Poetry, Religion, Senior Contributors|

E.E. Cummings’ attitude to dogma and formal religion may have remained skeptical, but true to his Unitarian roots, he retained respect for spirituality and a simple reverence towards the Almighty. Echoing the transcendentalism of Emerson, Whitman and Thoreau, Cummings bursts forth with simple, lyrical praise for God and nature. What shall we make of Edward [...]

“April 9th”

By |2026-04-07T14:44:31-05:00April 8th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Film, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays, War, World War II|

To every man upon this earth/ Death cometh soon or late./ And how can man die better/ Than facing fearful odds,/ For the ashes of his fathers,/ And the temples of his gods. —Thomas Babington Macaulay How much resistance is a man—and a country—obligated to muster against insurmountable odds? This is the central question of [...]

Palestrina: Commemorating a Musical Giant

By |2025-04-06T16:20:32-05:00April 6th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Catholicism, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors|

Later generations of Catholic Church leaders continually held up Palestrina’s music as the model for what sacred music should be. Whenever church music seemed in a rickety state—as in the semi-operatic effusions of the Victorian era, or the folky derivatives of the late 20th century—Palestrina was always there as a lighthouse to guide us back [...]

Why Is Beethoven So Popular?

By |2025-04-03T09:50:41-05:00April 1st, 2025|Categories: Beethoven 250, Ludwig van Beethoven, Michael De Sapio, Music, Timeless Essays|

It is Beethoven—not Bach or Mozart—who is the most universally popular composer in the classical canon. Why is this? Some authors have posited his democratic social beliefs or his personal story of victory over deafness. These are all certainly factors, but I prefer to look first at the aesthetic qualities of the music itself. Johann [...]

Is Rachmaninoff’s Music Too Schmaltzy?

By |2025-03-31T17:25:16-05:00March 31st, 2025|Categories: Culture, History, Music, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Timeless Essays|

Many classical music purists today consider Sergei Rachmaninoff’s music to be excessively sentimental, admittedly lush but too similar-sounding once you’ve heard one concerto. But is this a fair assessment? Sergei Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2, Op 18 is the kind of music that grips you by the collar and draws you into its world instantly, [...]

Hope Takes a God’s Eye View

By |2025-03-30T14:01:28-05:00March 30th, 2025|Categories: Art, Beauty, Catholicism, Hope, Love|

Hope’s gaze is not a surreal view that distorts and exaggerates reality. Rather, Hope is a God’s-eye view. It is the strength to see all of reality, ignoring none of it, embracing all of it, all through the Father’s own wisdom and love. This is part of a series entitled, “The Reason for Our Hope.” [...]

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