The famed L.A. chef opened Best Friend at Park MGM in 2018, and he’s there far more often than he needs to be.
Christopher Lawrence
Christopher Lawrence is the movie critic for the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
clawrence@reviewjournal.com … @life_onthecouch on Twitter. 702-380-4567
When “Curb Your Enthusiasm” debuted all the way back on Oct. 15, 2000, HBO was three seasons into “Sex and the City,” two seasons into “The Sopranos” and two years away from euthanizing “Arli$$.”
The show will record four episodes on Sunday and Monday at Paris Las Vegas with guests including Carrot Top, Christina Aguilera and Criss Angel.
“John Wick” and “A Dog’s Purpose,” both of which have sequels opening Friday, don’t have much in common besides some traumatizing canine deaths.
Much like Whitney Houston, Marvel Television believes that children are its future. Or at least 20-somethings playing teenagers.
It’s television’s biggest night.
“Crazy Rich Asians” doesn’t just embrace romantic-comedy cliches. It grabs those tropes by the waist and lifts them into the air, “Dirty Dancing”-style, before giving them a big, sloppy kiss on a crowded train platform in the rain.
“Skyscraper,” Dwayne Johnson’s hostages-in-a-high-rise action spectacle, owes an obvious debt to “Die Hard.”
If I’d been alive in ancient times, I like to think I’d have had the entrepreneurial gumption to start a burial site security firm.
If you’re having trouble relating to the jubilation surrounding this weekend’s release of “Black Panther” — the first major comic book movie starring a predominantly black cast — imagine for a moment that we weren’t living in an era in which every couple of months produced a superhero blockbuster starring a white guy named Chris.
It’s safe to say “Justice League” is more enjoyable than “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice.”
Depending on the metric, it’s the most popular television series in the world. It’s also the most difficult to write about.
Like his music, the late hip-hop icon’s movie roles were raw and as hard as the streets.
Those annoying ads aren’t going away any time soon. But Hulu does offer a commercial-free way to watch your favorite shows.
It may be a tale as old as time, but Paige O’Hara never seems to tire of talking about her role in it.