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Assuming become is required, the following 59 results were found.

  1. This Week's Film Reviews ( June 5th, 2026)https://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/movie-reviews/this-week-s-film-reviews-june-5th,-2026

    Candela Peña, and officer Quique Zárate, played by Pol López, investigate the case. Their search for the woman's identity becomes a race against time as they uncover links to organized crime, human trafficking, and an international conspiracy stretching...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Gilbert Seah
    • Category: Movie Reviews
  2. Toronto International Film Festival 2025 Capsule Reviews https://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/movie-reviews/toronto-international-film-festival-2025-capsule-reviews

    during a Christmas dinner, but his greed causes him to lose sight of things, till a life-altering lesson causes him to become a sort of prodigal son. The film was inspired by a true crime Montreal incident, it seems. Director Denis gets his details...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Gilbert Seah
    • Category: Movie Reviews
  3. The Christmas Movieshttps://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/movie-reviews/the-christmas-movies-2

    homo-eroticism runs high. Netflix’s new 10DANCE is about two talented but very different dancers who push each other to become better on and off the dance floor — ultimately discovering a deep emotional and romantic bond through their shared pursuit of...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Gilbert Seah
    • Category: Movie Reviews
  4. This Week's Film Reviews ( June 19th, 2026)https://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/movie-reviews/this-week-s-film-reviews-june-19th,-2026

    otherwise long and winding two and a half hour drama. From the way the emotions unfold, and the plot points revealed, it becomes clear that the resolution of the love relationships is not the issue, and would be left hanging, or how it ends up not...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Gilbert Seah
    • Category: Movie Reviews
  5. Black-owned cafés and bakeries in Toronto worth adding to your listhttps://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/lifestyle/food-and-drink/black-owned-cafés-and-bakeries-in-toronto-worth-adding-to-your-list

    authenticity, not just marketing language. The St. Clair and Danforth locations have cozy, welcoming interiors that have become neighbourhood staples. That farm-to-cup story also matters in a broader sense. Ethiopian coffee culture is among the oldest...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: AfroToronto Team
    • Category: Food and Drink
  6. The architects of equity: Black women shaping Toronto's nonprofit sectorhttps://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/business-and-innovation/the-architects-of-equity-black-women-shaping-toronto-s-nonprofit-sector

    they overcome daily, and the deliberate legacies they are cultivating for the next generation of Black leaders. As Toronto becomes more diverse with each passing year, the contributions of Black women in the nonprofit world grow ever more critical to...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Meres J. Weche
    • Category: Business and Innovation
  7. A crown that never fades: Jean-Michel Basquiat's prints come to Torontohttps://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/arts-entertainment/visual-arts/a-crown-that-never-fades-jean-michel-basquiat-s-prints-come-to-toronto

    his New York studio, sold for $45.3 million USD at Phillips in New York in May 2018. The editioned screenprint has since become one of the most sought-after works on the secondary market. Hollywood Africans in front of the Chinese Theater with...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Meres J. Weche
    • Category: Visual Arts
  8. Abouthttps://afrotoronto.com/about

    You can be part of sustaining this vital work. As a reader, you can join our community free of charge as a General User or become a Community Patron and help sustain independent community storytelling, conversations, and cultural coverage. As a...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Meres J. Weche
    • Category: Uncategorised
  9. Soul, storytelling, and Divine Brown’s UnCovered journeyhttps://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/arts-entertainment/soul,-storytelling,-and-divine-brown’s-uncovered-journey

    amazing cross section of music. When you look at the number one hits from 1985, it’s wild.” [00:19:13]: “Pop music now has become a really homogenized sound. If something sticks out from what’s generally on pop radio, it’s an anomaly for a moment and...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Meres J. Weche
    • Category: Arts and Entertainment
  10. Expanding culturally safe Black maternal care: A new partnership strengthening families across the GTAhttps://afrotoronto.com/content/news/community/expanding-culturally-safe-black-maternal-care

    When you combine those realities with structural racism, economic stress, and immigration-related pressures, the stakes become even higher. That is exactly why culturally safe, trauma-informed care is essential, particularly for African, Caribbean, and...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: News Editor
    • Category: Community
  11. This Week's Film Reviews ( Jan 16th, 2026)https://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/movie-reviews/this-week-s-film-reviews-jan-16th,-2026

    a normal pup. The story is simple and goes like this: Danny, a boy, receives a dog he names Charlie for his birthday. They become more like pals than master and dog. But as Charlie shows his age, Danny feels sad for him. But Charlie is abducted by...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Gilbert Seah
    • Category: Movie Reviews
  12. Remembering who you are: Melvin D. Bakandika on worthiness, myth, and the quiet power of self-recognitionhttps://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/lifestyle/remembering-who-you-are

    provocative. It invites readers into a space many quietly inhabit but rarely name. From the opening chapters, it becomes clear that this is not a book about inadequacy. It is a book about remembrance. About reconnecting with an intrinsic sense of value...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: AfroToronto Team
    • Category: Lifestyle
  13. This Week's Film Reviews ( Feb 6th, 2026)https://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/movie-reviews/this-week-s-film-reviews-feb-6th,-2026

    grabs one and instills both curiosity and anticipation of how the life of a little Hungarian girl who beats all odds to become the world’s QUEEN OF CHESS. Hungarian chess prodigy Judit Polgár challenges champion Garry Kasparov (both shown at the doc’s...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Gilbert Seah
    • Category: Movie Reviews
  14. Berlinale 2025https://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/movie-reviews/berlinale-2025

    returns to Asunción from Buenos Aires, bringing rock ’n’ roll — a new and liberating musical rhythm — to his home city. He becomes a radio personality and local sensation, captivating audiences with his music, energy, and sensual presence, and emerging...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Gilbert Seah
    • Category: Movie Reviews
  15. Yannis Davy Guibinga is rewriting how the world sees Gabon, one photograph at a timehttps://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/arts-entertainment/arts-and-culture/yannis-davy-guibinga-is-rewriting-how-the-world-sees-gabon,-one-photograph-at-a-time

    Yannis Davy Guibinga is a Montreal-based photographer and visual artist born in France and raised in Gabon, whose work has become a bold visual record of Black and Pan-African identity. With a client list spanning Apple, Nikon, and Google Arts &...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Meres J. Weche
    • Category: Arts & Culture
  16. The Canadian Film Fest 2026https://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/movie-reviews/the-canadian-film-fest-2026

    restoring a race bicycle salvaged from the trash. When a crooked dealer, aware of the bike's true value, steals it, Jame becomes trapped in a relentless pursuit, navigating Vancouver’s underbelly to reclaim his ride—or risk slipping back into the...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Gilbert Seah
    • Category: Movie Reviews
  17. Pikliz, jollof, jerk, injera, and more: A serious eater's guide to Afro-Caribbean and African dining in Torontohttps://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/lifestyle/food-and-drink/a-serious-eater-s-guide-to-afro-caribbean-and-african-dining-in-toronto

    experience in Toronto's restaurant industry, and the balance of their strengths is clearly evident in what Conejo Negro has become.

    The cooking is built on a fusion of Caribbean, Creole, and Latin American culinary traditions,...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Meres J. Weche
    • Category: Food and Drink
  18. This Week's Film Reviews ( Apr 3, 2026)https://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/movie-reviews/this-week-s-film-reviews-apr-3,-2026

    rule and increasing Jewish immigration. The film follows a group of Palestinian villagers and resistance fighters as they become caught up in the early days of the revolt in 1936. A quiet rural village is disrupted by British military crackdowns....

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Gilbert Seah
    • Category: Movie Reviews
  19. From Lagos to Kingston Road: How Blessinglicious is bringing Nigerian street food home to Scarboroughhttps://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/lifestyle/from-lagos-to-kingston-road-how-blessinglicious-is-bringing-nigerian-street-food-home-to-scarborough

    themselves tofu people often come back for it. Her thinking on this is straightforward: Nigerian food does not need to become something else to welcome other people. It needs to be cooked well and presented with honesty. The invitation into her culinary...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: AfroToronto Team
    • Category: Lifestyle
  20. This Week's Film Reviews ( May 22nd, 2026)https://afrotoronto.com/content/articles/movie-reviews/this-week-s-film-reviews-may-22nd,-2026

    Benji is not portrayed as the stereotypical “perfect” gay leading man. His anxieties about body image and desirability become major themes in the film. He often uses humour, partying, sex, and drugs to mask loneliness and rejection. The story explores...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Gilbert Seah
    • Category: Movie Reviews
Results 1 - 20 of 59

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