Get curated editors’ picks, peeks behind the scenes, film recommendations and more.
Since becoming India’s prime minister in 2014, Narendra Modi has been the figurehead of the nation’s shift away from secular pluralism and towards Hindu nationalism. This transformation has been accompanied by a major uptick in violence against religious minorities by Hindu extremists, and especially towards the Muslims who represent the country’s largest religious minority. In his disquieting documentary/narrative film Holy Cowboys, the Indian director Varun Chopra transports viewers to small-town India, where Hindu nationalist extremism most often proliferates. Combining observational documentary filmmaking with some scripted sequences, Chopra charts how a group of teenage boys slide into the grips of violent ideology, guided by leaders of a local extremist group and fuelled by the Hindu belief that cows are sacred. Through his subtle and sometimes shocking portrait, Chopra offers a penetrating look at the manner in which nearly any kind of violent extremist movement spreads – the fervent belief that not acting is the greatest moral wrong.
Director: Varun Chopra
Producer: Anna Hashmi
Website: Holy Cowboys
video
Computing and artificial intelligence
Why large language models are mysterious – even to their creators
8 minutes
video
Spirituality
Through rituals of prayer, a monk cultivates a quietly radical concept of freedom
4 minutes
video
Fairness and equality
‘To my old master’ – a freed slave answers the request to return to his old plantation
7 minutes
video
Design and fashion
A ceramicist puts her own bawdy spin on the folk language of pottery
14 minutes
video
Animals and humans
Villagers struggle to keep their beloved, endangered ape population afloat
19 minutes
video
Art
Radical doodles – how ‘exquisite corpse’ games embodied the Surrealist movement
15 minutes
video
Language and linguistics
Why Susan listens to recordings of herself speaking a language she no longer remembers
5 minutes
video
Ethics
Plato saw little value in privacy. How do his ideas hold up in the information age?
5 minutes
video
Information and communication
‘Astonished and somewhat terrified’ – Victorians’ reactions to the phonograph
36 minutes