Ethan William Childress, who portrays the young son on the “Black-ish” spinoff, has a way of making people feel very old.
Christopher Lawrence
Christopher Lawrence is the movie critic for the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
clawrence@reviewjournal.com … @life_onthecouch on Twitter. 702-380-4567
Showtime scooped up YouTube’s dark comedy “On Becoming a God in Central Florida.”
They’re too old to be sharing a house. By a couple of centuries.
Oscar ratings have been trending downward since 2014, having plummeted from 43.7 million viewers that year to an all-time low of 26.5 million in 2018.
Thirteen months after the world read and heard her about her traumatic relationship with John Meehan through the Los Angeles Times’ stories and podcasts, Henderson resident Debra Newell attended the Hollywood premiere of “Dirty John,” the Bravo series they inspired.
Debra Newell is polite, but she doesn’t take the time to tell them her story.
There’s a lull between blockbusters, prestige films are still weeks away, and the movies being released seem random at best.
Sure, it’s cutting it close, but there’s still time to revel in the predictable-yet-comforting ritual of the Lifetime Christmas movie thanks to the channel’s six new short films.
Let’s get this out of the way right up front: This is, at best, a mediocre crop of new fall shows.
Devoted may not be a strong enough word to describe some fans of demon-fighting brothers Sam and Dean Winchester.
“The Last Word” will make you reflect on your own stint on this planet and the time that could’ve been better spent doing something else — like the 108 minutes it takes to watch this movie.
With “Magic Mike Live” set to open next week at the Hard Rock Hotel, here’s a look at five other movie-themed shows that would be perfect for the Las Vegas stage.
If Bradley Whitford were in more horror movies, I would watch more horror movies.
The way things are shaping up, “La La Land” is going to leave Sunday’s Oscars (5:30 p.m., ABC) with pretty much everything short of a best actor statue
While the previews may look frightful, the movie is unexpectedly delightful — depending on just how much James Franco you can tolerate.