Spielberg returns to one of his favorite subjects with a fun and goofy popcorn movie that shows how far he's come in the last 50 years.
Spielberg returns to one of his favorite subjects with a fun and goofy popcorn movie that shows how far he's come in the last 50 years.
"Sex Education" writer Sophie Goodhart helms Hulu's solid sitcom about a mother (Walker) willing to burn down her own life if it means preventing her twenty-something daughter (Yali Topol Margalith) from marrying her fifty-something best friend (Jemaine Clement).
Sex workers, shut-ins, and social media influencers collide in this small but vital New York portrait of overlapping lives.
The third season of Rolin Jones' Anne Rice adaptation — retitled to reflect its significant shift in POV — passes Lestat (Sam Reid) the mic, so the licentious drama queen can respond to the book about him — and rock the f*ck out.
Tribeca: Rachel Rose’s directorial debut puts a modern spin on Virginia Woolf’s classic novel, centering on two women who navigate motherhood in different — and sometimes eerily similar — ways.
Ryuya Suzuki writes, directs, draws, edits, and scores this sci-fi tinged biopic about the multitude of masks that we wear throughout our time on earth.
Generic as this straight-to-streaming content might be, any movie with Betty Gilpin is worth at least 100 minutes of your time.
After a career spent exploring transcendent friendships sparked by music, Carney directs Paul Rudd and Nick Jonas in a story that gives the ugly side of human nature a fighting chance.
The underrated Adam Carter Rehmeier uses his strong facility with actors to help make the archetypal seem fresh and exciting.
Nicholas Galitzine is a cosmically swole himbo in a movie about how having a big heart is more important than having big muscles, but also that having _really_ big muscles is the most important thing of all.
The long-time country singer, songwriter, and radio host melds fact and fiction in Katy Chevigny's (mostly true, but not totally) Nashville drama.
Mandy Moore co-stars as a stay-at-home mom whose "Shark Tank" win changes her family forever.
A birthday celebration turns into hell on Earth in this tensely crafted thriller where the production values elevate conventional material.
"Club Kid," "Camp Miasma," and "Minotaur" may not have a lot in common, but they all stood out from a weak lineup for a similar reason.
The creators of the acclaimed comedy about surviving adolescence return with a similar series set in the animal kingdom, where four furry friends navigate love, sex, and survival — among other primal instincts.
Cannes: Emmanuel Marre fictionalizes the experiences of his great-grandfather in this bold political drama, who was a functionary in France’s collaborationist government during World War II.__
Cannes: In Zachary Wigon’s deliciously dark adaptation of Virginia Feito's novel of the same name, the beloved scream queen switches sides. Kind of.
Cannes: One of cinema's most idiosyncratic auteurs delivers a kaleidoscope of riffs and references that showcase his baroquely wrought aesthetic, even if the story is thin.
Cannes: Malek and Tom Sturridge play partners whose already-strained relationship is tested by the arrival of a new and beguiling twink neighbor, played by Luther Ford, downstairs.
Cannes: Dern's dueling passions for acting and long distance running intersect in this film about how Hollywood stardom is a marathon, not a sprint.
Eric Kripke's superhero satire-turned-political allegory wraps up with the long-promised showdown between Homelander (Antony Starr) and The Butcher (Karl Urban). But its closing message hits much sooner, and much softer, than may seem appropriate for Amazon's shocking, outspoken series.
The Emmy winner plays a single mom whose casual relationship with a cam boy turns her life upside-down in a new series created by David J. Rosen and directed by David Gordon Green.
Cannes: The J-horror master tries his hand at a classic jidaigeki, with this plodding detective story set within the walls of a besieged 16th century castle.
Adapted from Keiran Goddard’s novel, Clio Barnard’s ensemble drama about five friends from Birmingham is rooted in astutely observed emotional truths.
Cannes: The controversial arthouse icon plays the heiress to a Venezuelan cacao plantation, who, upon returning home, finds the occupants unwilling to budge in Jorge Thielen Armand's film.
Cannes: "Anatomy of a Fall" breakout Milo Machado-Graner and newcomer Jane Beever shine in the directorial debut of "Arco" producer and Mia Hansen-Løve collaborator Félix de Givry.
Cannes: A tortured filmmaker writes — and re-writes — a screenplay about a tortured filmmaker in this satisfying late-career gem from the Spanish giant.
We've seen this story before, and we know where it's going, but the "Loveless" and "Leviathan" director repositions the cliches of adultery thrillers into his own gloomy register to engrossing, icily exacting results.
Director Laila Marrakchi pulls from real stories of Moroccan immigrants to construct a damning indictment of a labor system that leaves them voiceless.
Cannes: Nothing but life happens in Yukiko Sode’s elusive adaptation of Mieko Kawakami’s bestseller.