News

Go back 30 or 40 years, and video game cover art had some clear issues. It didn’t always follow precise style guides. It was ...
This article is brought to you by our exclusive subscriber partnership with our sister title USA Today, and has been written by our American colleagues. It does not necessarily reflect the view of The ...
Evolving threats, doctrine, and tactics drive significant advancements in the battlespace. Electronic Warfare (EW) or Electromagnetic Warfare products need to keep pace by leveraging advances in ...
I knew from the first few seconds that “Warfare” was going to be a different kind of war movie. Ray Mendoza and Alex Garland’s film about a real battle in the Iraq War opens with a sexy ...
New leak features concept art for the new, still-untitled Battlefield game. The concept art provides a look at the theme DICE is going with and potential multiplayer maps. The concept art shots give ...
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or ...
Director Alex Garland and ex-soldier Ray Mendoza have recreated one of the Iraq War’s darkest days – and in doing so, have made some enemies ...
Appropriately, Warfare begins with a deafening assault, as Eric Prydz’s horny 2004 aerobics video for ‘Call On Me’ fills the screen, its sweaty, hormonal hardbodies lunging and lurching.
Warfare is set during one day in November of 2006, when a Navy SEALs outfit was suddenly faced with an evacuation straight out of hell’s gate. Though the film is meticulously based on first-hand ...
By David Rooney Chief Film Critic The maximum-intensity jolt to the senses that is Warfare knows exactly what it’s doing by opening with a scene of collective levity and back-slapping ...
Last year filmmaker Alex Garland gave us the "anti-war" movie Civil War, and now he's continued to push the boundaries of our concept of war films with Warfare (in theatres April 11). Co-writing and ...
Here’s a piece of advice: watch Warfare on one of the front rows at the cinema to experience the full effect of this most immersive of films. Yes, ‘immersive’ as a word is at a level of over ...