Dig 1970s culture? Well, here’s a list of seven essential ’70s films available you can stream on Netflix.
Movies
If you’ve had “Big Fish” on your Netflix list for a while now, you better watch it — it’s part of 53 other titles being dropped from the streaming service in July.
If you’re getting bored with the same titles on Netflix, starting on the first of July, the streaming service will be adding 57 new titles.
The sequel is part buddy comedy, part road trip, part courtroom drama and part goofy action spectacle. But none of the genres is given the time to be sufficiently, satisfyingly explored, despite the movie’s way-too-long 115-minute running time.
If Netflix were a Nielsen-rated TV network, the No. 1 streaming service would, within a year, attain a larger 24-hour audience than each of the major broadcast networks — ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC — according to a Wall Street analyst firm.
With “Terminator Genisys” opening July 1, here’s your A-to-Z guide to the first four movies in the “Terminator” franchise.
Did you dislike “G.I. Joe”? Don’t worry — its star, Channing Tatum, did too.
Disney has launched development on a Charles Darwin movie with Stephen Gaghan on board to direct from his own screenplay.
Universal’s plans for a cinematic universe based on the Transformers franchise are starting to come together as it signs a few interesting names who will help develop the Transformers movies of tomorrow.
It’s only the second original movie from Disney/Pixar since 2009’s “Up” as the company found itself stuck in a rash of sequels. The wait, though, was certainly worth it.
AMC’s new teaser for its “Walking Dead” spinoff, “Fear the Walking Dead,” is decidedly zombie-free.
Indominus rex and the rest of the prehistoric beasties are expected to run right over this week’s newcomers, including “Inside Out,” only the second non-sequel from Disney/Pixar since 2009’s “Up.”
Watch Amy Poehler (Joy), “The Office’s” Phyllis Smith (Sadness), Bill Hader (Fear), Mindy Kaling (Disgust) and Lewis Black (Anger) explain their characters in the latest animated adventure from Disney/Pixar.
Comedian Paula Poundstone doesn’t like what she sees at the park near her Santa Monica home: “95 percent” of parents and nannies ignoring their kids while staring at phones.
“Boulevard,” co-starring Bob Odenkirk and Kathy Baker, hits theaters beginning July 17.