What Makes a Movie a Christmas Film — and Why These Titles Remain Irreplaceable
Categoria: English
A selection of Miscelana articles in English, exploring film, television, music and cultural history for international readers.
Versões em inglês dos artigos do Miscelana, trazendo para o público internacional críticas, análises e histórias de cultura, cinema, séries e muito mais.
1975: when Hollywood decided to face the world without filters
Narrated by Jane Fonda and directed by Morgan Neville, the Netflix documentary turns a “legendary year” into a lucid essay on art, politics, and the cinema that still defines us
50 years of Dog Day Afternoon: the true heist that became a spectacle
Sidney Lumet turns a real 1972 case into a feverish portrait of New York, of a traumatized country, and of a man trying to control his own narrative with Al Pacino delivering one of cinema’s definitive performances.
10 Movies to Watch at Christmas 2025: Between New Releases and Timeless Classics
Suggestions for the end of the year that balance comfort, emotional repetition, and a few welcome streaming surprises
Home for Christmas: Why the Norwegian Netflix Series Became a Rare Portrait of Adult Love
More than a holiday rom-com, Home for Christmas explores loneliness, emotional fatigue, and the courage to love after 30
Merteiul – The Seduction, (Recap Series Finale): Versailles
In its final episode, the series chooses easy shock, betrays the logic of the original text, and turns the Marquise into a trophy of power
What the Top 10 Before Christmas 2026 Reveals About Streaming
This Week’s Top 10 Confirms It: December Is the Month of Comfort, Events, and Ritual Viewing
Nick Reiner Trial: dates, charges, and next steps
Where the case stands now, and what happens after the hearing scheduled for January 2026
Steve Harrington: The Unlikely Hero of Stranger Things (“You Die, I Die”)
From planned villain to the heart of the series — the rise of a character who refused to stay small
Emily in Paris Season 5: When Escapism Finally Comes at a Cost
Why the series works better once it stops pretending that charm, fashion, and reinvention can solve everything
