Jeffrey Blitz’s ensemble rom-com about a group of outcasts at a wedding is unfortunately staid and irritating.
The late-night host emphasized America’s common interests with its southern neighbor in his latest international special.
The $35-a-month live-television package is the latest to try to capture the attention of cord-cutters.
The comic-book icon rides into the sunset in grim, R-rated fashion—and it works.
The stunning film’s unexpected triumph is part of a larger trend toward more small and intimate projects for the Academy.
Macon Blair’s directorial debut, a big winner at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, swerves wildly between indie comedy and ultra-violence.
The Fences actor might collect his third Oscar this year, an achievement only attained by a handful of Hollywood’s biggest icons.
The Key & Peele comedian Jordan Peele makes a confident, richly textured debut as a writer and director.
A $100 million gangster epic starring Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, and Joe Pesci has become too risky a proposition for major studios.
The new documentary returns to a safe haven for LGBTQ youths of color first examined in the landmark film Paris Is Burning.
The Tonight Show host, long derided for his lack of hard-hitting political material, is struggling to stay relevant in 2017.
The composer of films like Gladiator, Inception, and The Dark Knight has become so ubiquitous, he’s playing at Coachella.
Gore Verbinski’s new movie is among the most demented things produced by Hollywood in recent years.
The series’ heroes are finally making moves against the tyrannical antagonist Negan, but they may be too late to stop a ratings slide.
The anarchic animated film brilliantly deconstructs pop culture’s angriest comic-book character.
They belong to one of Hollywood’s most derided subgenres, but is there any merit to films like Assassin’s Creed and Resident Evil?
There’s no puppy, but the sequel to the Keanu Reeves-starring cult classic understands what made its predecessor so great.
The Late Show host has been much more direct in talking about the new administration, and it's translating to a ratings boost.
FX’s new show plucks a character from the X-Men universe and gives him the prestige-television treatment.
The screen legend Robert De Niro plays a grumpy standup in Taylor Hackford’s interminable new film.