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Find reviews and commentary from the time your film was released.
Find breaking news, multimedia, reviews and editorials on national and international business, sports, movies, travel, books, jobs, education, real estate, and more. Access historical New York Times content using the TimesMachine. Includes access to Cooking, Wirecutter, and The Learning Network. Requires a user account tied to your CCC email address.
**First time users: Sign up for a free account to access the New York Times
Up-to-date biographical information, overviews, full-text literary criticism and reviews on nearly 130,000 writers in all disciplines, from all time periods and from around the world.
Offers academic journals, industry and trade papers, news journalism, and popular magazines covering topics such as film & television theory, preservation & restoration, writing, production, cinematography, technical aspects, and reviews. Access full text by following the Linked Full Text or Request this item through Interlibrary Loan (ILL) links.
Perform your initial search with the one keyword (or keyword phrase) that describes your most important topic idea.

We recommend as you start your research, start big and broad! Use your first few searches to test out how much information is available on your topic.
The short answer is because of artificial intelligence (AI).
The long answer is because nearly all databases use AI in their search algorithms, and that algorithm includes looking for related keywords automatically. Quotation marks typically override this automatic related-words search.
Skim article titles, abstracts, and subjects (highlighted with labels) listed in your search results.

In this example, an additional (and maybe better) keyword is Generation Alpha.
To find the most relevant and useful results, you will want to perform multiple searches using different keywords.
This process is called "iterative searching." Good research is iterative, meaning it is a circular process where you repeat steps more than once and improve upon what you have done before. Changing up your keywords is part of this process.
Different keywords bring back different kinds of results for different kinds of readers.
Find more relevant information by adding in keywords that target specific aspects of your topic.

For precision searching. Quotation marks restrict the database to finding results containing keywords in the exact order as written, which means the precise context you need is reflected in the search results.
For precision searching. AND commands the database to find search results containing keyword #1 AND keyword #2.
We can change that! There are a couple reasons why you might get zero, or very few, results:
We can change that!
Add in additional keywords that target specific aspects of your topic.
Databases have built-in tools to help you filter through your search results to identify the best resources. Most database results pages offer the following tools:
Talk to a librarian about using built-in tools to help make your research process easier and more efficient.