Welcome to The Metropolitan Review

by The Editors

January 27, 2025

We are a quarter of the way through the new century, and the state of high culture is not what it should be. Individuals are no less brilliant, but there is a clear institutional lack. It’s as if the great publishers, film producers, and record labels can no longer provide us the artistic nourishment that…

Feed: Short Fiction

by Sophie Paquette

July 11, 2026

That Bluechew one is on, having modified its vertically formatted clips to our TV by shouldering them with thick black bars or, in the case of one woman, multiplying her image across the screen in many-headed tile mode, and Helen, on her phone, scrolling, tilts her head up from where it rests in my lap.

Lunar Caustic: On Emmalea Russo’s The Moon Papers

by Scott Spires

July 9, 2026

There exists such a thing as a “poet’s novel” — that is, a novel written by a writer who is primarily a poet. Notable examples include The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge by Rainer Maria Rilke, Pictures from an Institution by Randall Jarrell, and The Issa Valley by Czesław Miłosz. These aren’t just novels that happen to have been written by…

A Dim Flicker: On Jesi Bender’s Child of Light

by Samuél Lopez-Barrantes

July 7, 2026

“Works of art are of an infinite solitude,” Rainer Maria Rilke writes in Letters to a Young Poet, “and no means of approach is so useless as criticism. Only love can touch and hold them and be fair to them.”Child of Light, a novel written by the artist, poet, and playwright Jesi Bender, has certainly received…

“Forty-One Things That God Invented”

by Ben Bar

July 5, 2026

1. God invented strawberry [sic] / 2. God invented the lie I told my grandpa right before he died / 3. God invented the letter ‘m’ / 4. God invented my bed sheets being dotted with weird yellow crust that never sleeps / and slowly appears wherever it pleases / 5. God invented static electricity…

The Spielberg Century: On Disclosure Day

by Sam Jennings

July 2, 2026

If it seems odd to call Steven Spielberg a 21st-century filmmaker, that’s surely because Steven Spielberg has had an odd 21st century. On the surface there’s been little consistency to his choice of projects. Yet look closer, and some themes emerge. There are the weird one-offs (The Adventures of Tintin), hokey throwbacks (War HorseKingdom of the

A Metropolitan Review Film Chronicle: Two Young Writers On Michael and Backrooms

by Grant De Micco, Max Bolen

June 30, 2026

After an eight-year hiatus from feature films, actor and comedian Mike Myers shocked audiences around the world with a surprise return in 2018’s Bohemian Rhapsody, playing a fictional record executive who rejects the titular song for its length and perceived radicalism. Myers’ appearance remains one of the more bizarre facts of his late career, given that…

Inside Television: Short Fiction

by Brad Phillips

June 27, 2026

Tracy said capitalism was like anal sex — hostile, unnatural, pleasurable for men at women’s expense. She said that and a whole lot else, like “whenever we’re around my mom I feel like I’m suffocating” and “your brother talks way too much about wanting to see Winona Ryder’s tits.” I wasn’t listening. I know that now. I…

The Infertility of Time: On Solvej Balle’s On the Calculation of Volume

by Denise S. Robbins

June 26, 2026

Solvej Balle’s book series On the Calculation of Volume is all about waiting. This waiting extends to its readership. Though it’s cast as a septology, only six of the books are published, and of those, only four have been translated into English. Book V is scheduled to be released in English in November. Book seven does…

The Galactic Triumph of the New York Knicks: On an Improbable Basketball Run

by Andrew Bell

June 23, 2026

It all started with an unexpected late-night phone call delivering some much-needed good news. I was coming back from visiting my dad, who was fresh off a debilitating car accident that cost him five broken bones and a sternum in the process. Luckily, despite the laborious rehab, he was quickly en route to a full…

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