‘The Cord’ Review: A Real Hero for Our Times in Nolwenn Hervé’s Compassionate Portrait

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://variety.com/2026/film/reviews/the-cord-review-documentary-venezuela-1236688464/

‘The Cord’ Review: A Real Hero for Our Times in Nolwenn Hervé’s Compassionate Portrait
#Variety #Reviews #CPHDOX #TheCord

https://variety.com/2026/film/reviews/the-cord-review-documentary-venezuela-1236688464/

'The Cord' Review: Director Nolwenn Hervé Captures Hearts at CPH: DOX

In 'The Cord,' the CPH: DOX Competition entry wins audiences' hearts with a warm story about a Venezuelan advocate for women's health.

Variety

WLUSP STAFF SPRING BOOK RECOMMENDATIONS

Spring is coming, so we want to give our readers some great book recommendations for the new season.
This can be in the sense of spring as rebirth. But also relevant to whatever spring means to you—it could be flowers, beauty, cleaning, etc. This month our team answers: what does spring mean to you and what could someone read to understand it?

Jesus’ Son, Denis Johnson

Kurtis Rideout

Publisher, TCE


Johnson’s short story cycle is a fever dream ruminating on the underbelly of rural America. Worth the praise.

The Judgement of Paris, Ross King

Jessi Wood

Creative Director, TCE


Follow 10 years of Parisian art, war and life through the eyes of two French painters, bohemian impressionist Édouard
Manet and Napoleonic Classicist Ernest Meissonier. Who knew painting involved so many zebra steaks and duels to the death?

Kitchen, Banana Yoshimoto

Tusharika Tyagi

EIC, Blueprint


Shows a way of real life and love through an appreciation of kitchens.

The Year of Magical Thinking, Joan Didion

Ayden Elworthy

Advertising Manager, WLUSP


A must read for anyone on a grief journey. Heartbreaking, plain, painstakingly honest. The Year Of Magical Thinking chronicles Joan Didion’s sudden loss of her husband, and the aftermath of a life lost. A book I will be returning to for the rest of my life.

The Joy of Solitude, Robert J. Coplan

Piper Force

EIC, The Sputnik


Solitude is often seen as something sad and a bad thing to enjoy. Coplan does a great job of using scientific studies to explain why solitude can actually be beneficial.

The Deluge, Stephen Markley

Thando Bhebe

President, WLUSP

The Deluge is timely—its main focus is on the climate crisis—and through its pages we witness humanity react to this crisis either in a daring attempt to prevent it, or cynically ignore it. Every chapter feels ripped straight from a real headline, and the author wrote this book with care and deep research. It’s 10 years in the making and I believe its worth everyone’s time to read it!

The Thursday Murder Club, Richard Osman

Adrian Quijano

Editorial Assistant, TCE

This is one book I’ve read so far this year that has stuck in my head. The book follows four unlikely friends who meetup once a week in their retirement community to investigate unsolved killings. It’s quirky, funny and charming with just a hint of murder.

A Wizard of Earthsea, Ursula K. Le Guin

Nate Dawes

Station Manager, Radio Laurier

I also want to read it, and so help me god this recommendation had better summon hell behind me and get me to finish it.

Yvain, The Knight of the Lion, Chrétien De Troyes

Vlad Latis

Creative Director, The Cord

Yvain, the Knight of the Lion, presents a relatively short but compelling story of a knight’s fallen romance being rekindled by chivalrous acts and the help of a lion whose
adoration he gains. It’s a perfect short read that matches the hope and revitalization of the spring season.

The Lonely City, Olivia Liang

Sheryl Madakkai

EIC, The Cord

The Lonely City by Olivia Laing is a contemplative and deeply personal exploration of loneliness through art. Blending memoir, cultural criticism and biography, Laing reflects on her time living alone in New York while examining artists who grappled with isolation, including Edward Hopper, Andy Warhol and David Wojnarowicz. She considers how urban life can intensify solitude, yet also create unexpected forms of connection. The prose is intimate and compassionate, offering insight without sentimentality. Rather than portraying loneliness as purely tragic, Laing presents it as a shared human condition that art can illuminate. Thoughtful and evocative, the book resonates with anyone who has felt alone in a crowd. 

#AWizardOfEarthsea #advertisingManager #bananaYoshimoto #blueprintMagazine #jesusSon #JoanDidion #Kitchen #president #rossKing #spring #springBookRecommendations #springBooks #Staff #stephenMarkley #TCE #theCord #theJoyOfSolitude #theJudgementOfParis #theSputnik #theThursdayMurderClub #theYearOfMagicalThinking #ursulaKLeGuin #wlusp #yvainTheKnightOfTheLion

PUBLISHER’S NOTE: IN PURSIUT OF PERFECT KIDNEYS

Why must there be consequences? I arrived at a pool party last Monday with pure intentions.  

The plan was to eat ćevapčići and drink Corona with lime, but I just spent half of the time doubled over in the bathroom and the other half indisposed on an Art Deco couch located in the basement. 

All attendants noted the severity of my condition. Someone handed me a painkiller. Eventually, I stumbled out of the front door. Dodging the humps of a happy bulldog, I clutched my side as I found the seat of my car, Percocet mingling together with the lint in the pocket of my jeans. 

Here we go again. 

Sparing the more specific details—my parents told me not to discuss my ailments and so I find it embarrassing to do so—I’ve been dealing with a (technically) chronic health issue for like a decade. 

I’ll let anyone reading this guess and speculate because I think that’s a fun thing to do. But it’s not that serious, it’s hereditary, and it’s directly related to whether I’m treating my body well and whether I am listening to what my body is telling me.  

And being sick and young is romantic. Staying home and watching the first Harry Potter on VHS—J.K. Rowling is a garbage human for the record—eating Lipton chicken noodle soup and sweating it out on the couch. All you miss out on is some school and maybe a couple games of grounders at the park.  

Ailing at 30 fucking sucks because I know my body and I know the consequences of my actions. I know that I need focus on staying hydrated and I can feel my organs begging for the proper care and attention that they deserve. The problem is that my well-being is the first thing I sacrifice to preserve a bumping social life and active participation in the workplace. 

But then I had to cancel all my personal plans, and at work we are dead in the middle of an office move and a M.D.O.T.Y.W.O.S. (Massive Decluttering of Twenty Years Worth of Shit—I just made up that acronym to save us time), so basically, I set my whole summer back an entire week because I didn’t want to be proactive about monitoring and managing my health. 

And that’s the lesson for this note I am writing at 1 p.m. on August 6. I wrote an editor’s note for The Cord published in March 2018 called “Proactive approach” and it contained the exact same sentiments that I expressed above, so clearly the seven years of being alive since then haven’t taught me much of anything. 

But it’s nice to have a reminder, even if it comes in the form of a sharp pain in your kidney.  

A reminder that your body is destructible and fragile and very much worth taking care of.  

A reminder that people rely on you and unless you want to let them down you must be the version of yourself that doesn’t write off an entire week over a relatively preventable health emergency.  

A reminder that self-care isn’t just a buzzword used to sell skin care products but also a method of preserving the integrity and sanctity of the holy vessel that is your body. Or whatever. 

#chronicIllness #Health #JessiWood #kidneyStones #KurtisRideout #mentalHealth #Productivity #theCord