Audrey Fox
School
Clark University
Harvard University
Expertise
Classic Hollywood, Period Dramas, Star Wars
- Audrey has interviewed some of the biggest names in Hollywood, including Dan Stevens and Will Forte.
- Her work at Jumpcut Online as a writer and editor contributed to the outlet winning an award in the group category at the UK Blog Awards in 2019.
- Before following her passion for writing, Audrey worked at a casting office and a talent agency in New York, assisting on a number of independent films including Gun Hill Road, Union Square, and Musical Chairs.
Experience
Audrey is a writer who has worked in entertainment journalism for nearly a decade. She has contributed her film knowledge to outlets such as RogerEbert.com, Crooked Marquee, /Film, We Live Entertainment, Awards Circuit, IGN, and The Nerdist. She also worked as an assistant editor at Jumpcut Online for three years, helping to bring Jumpcut: The Magazine to life. Audrey has a wide range of interests in film, from German expressionism and the modern rom-com to the classic era of Hollywood studio filmmaking and Star Wars.
Education
Audrey earned a bachelor's degree in film studies and history at Clark University, as well as a master's degree in international relations at Harvard University.
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Stories By Audrey Fox
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Andrew Haigh's "All of Us Strangers" grapples with grief, loss, and loneliness in a profound way, tackling its themes while avoiding trite narrative devices.
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"American Fiction" is an insightful dramedy about the entertainment industry's habit of perpetuating Black stereotypes. Here's what the ending really means.
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Disney's "Percy Jackson and the Olympians" has unmistakable promise, adapting the Rick Riordan books into a likable, energetic fantasy series.
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Bradley Cooper and Carey Mulligan command the screen in "Maestro," a powerful and visually astonishing Netflix biopic about composer Leonard Bernstein.
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With "Poor Things," Yorgos Lanthimos reunites with "The Favourite" star Emma Stone for a new fantastical, arch, feminist riff on "Frankenstein."
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The Artful Dodger, played magnificently by Thomas Brodie-Sangster, rules the screen in his new Australian medical drama series, now streaming on Hulu.
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All biopics take some liberties with the actual lives of their subjects, and Ridley Scott's "Napoleon" is no different.
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"Wish" tries to honor Disney's classic fairy tale adaptations, but it also can't resist some of modern animation's more cringey affections.
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Barry Keoghan shines in "Saltburn," an aesthetically gorgeous take on class structure that never fails to engage the audience.
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Joaquin Phoenix takes on one of his biggest roles to date in "Napoleon," co-starring Vanessa Kirby, as Ridley Scott's historical epic covers the emperor's life.
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Apple TV+ cracks open Edith Wharton's unfinished novel "The Buccaneers" with a new series, modeled with anachronistic flair after the Netflix hit "Bridgerton."
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Colman Domingo commands the screen in Netflix's "Rustin," a biopic about Civil Rights Movement organizer Bayard Rustin, directed by George C. Wolfe.
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Anthony Doerr's Pulitzer Prize-winning World War II novel "All the Light We Cannot See" gets the Netflix miniseries treatment, and the results are mixed.
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Although sitcom star Matthew Perry worked on a number of television projects in the past decade and a half, his most recent film project dates back to 2009.
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As well as a great cast and an intriguing premise, "Fingernails" also leaves us with plenty of questions by the end. We take a look at what it all means.
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The strong lead cast helps make "Killers of the Flower Moon" one of Martin Scorsese's best films, though it could benefit from featuring Lily Gladstone more.
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Ellen Kuras directs Kate Winslet in "Lee," a biopic about intrepid photojournalist Lee Miller co-starring Marion Cotillard and Andy Samberg.
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"Lessons in Chemistry" succeeds with Brie Larson and Lewis Pullman in magnetic lead roles, despite the show's meandering subplots.
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Weston Razooli's Wyoming-set preteen adventure film "Riddle of Fire" screened at Cannes, the Toronto International Film Festival, and Fantastic Fest.
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Craig Gillespie dramatizes the GameStop short squeeze with his stock market dramedy "Dumb Money," starring Paul Dano as the Redditor behind the curtain.
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"Gen V" feels like a natural extension of "The Boys" in many ways, and it's a more than worthy successor to the popular Amazon series.
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Despite a stellar cast of Jessie Buckley, Riz Ahmed, and Jeremy Allen White, director Christos Nikou's "Fingernails" is a slight sci-fi romance.
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Anna Kendrick astounds with her directorial debut, "Woman of the Hour," a Netflix release about a serial killer who appeared on "The Dating Game" in the 1970s.
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The international animated coproduction "The Inventor" was clearly a labor of love for its creators, but the stop-motion da Vinci movie falls short of flying.
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Directed by Guy Nattiv and starring Helen Mirren, "Golda" is an unengaging historical drama, though as Golda Meir, Mirren can do this role in her sleep.
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The Disney+ series "Ahsoka" shows plenty of promise, with a great setting and intriguing story, even if the lore might be too much for "Star Wars" newbies.
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DC's newest superhero film, "Blue Beetle," is likable but generic — though it features a charming lead performance from Xolo Maridueña as Jaime Reyes.