Just don’t expect to see the two Netflix films nominated for best picture.
Christopher Lawrence
Christopher Lawrence is the movie critic for the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
clawrence@reviewjournal.com … @life_onthecouch on Twitter. 702-380-4567
You don’t have to wait for the new year for a new wave of TV shows.
“The Boys” takes a deliciously cynical look at the greed and corruption behind the superhero industrial complex, while “Pennyworth traces the origins of Bruce Wayne’s butler.
Among the newcomers, Steph Curry stars in “Holey Moley,” ABC’s extreme mini golf competition.
It would be hard for a film festival to attract more attention than by screening documentaries invoking Satan and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Not only is there more good TV now than ever before, the quality is almost absurdly high.
What began as an attempt to pen the unofficial 11th season of “Friends” morphed into the theatrical equivalent of Rachel’s Thanksgiving trifle
Maybe — just maybe — there’s such a thing as too much “Star Wars.”
Adaptations are all the rage this summer with new TV series based on novels by Stephen King, J.K. Rowling, Tom Clancy and Gillian Flynn, as well as a Marvel comic book, the movie “Heathers” and the life of Kyle Richards of “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.”
With the Olympics nearly over, TV is opening its floodgates to new shows now that most viewers have recovered from the thrill of doubles luge.
At this rate, we’re probably no more than five years away from Netflix livestreaming the entire Sundance Film Festival.
Though the “Twilight” star proves a good enough actor to disappear into his underwritten role, “Good Time” fails to live up to its name.
Welcome to your next Netflix obsession.
It’s summer, and once again ABC is partying like it’s 1979. A low-rent 1979 at that.
Yeah, it’s miserable outside. But hang in there: Winter is coming.