Promotion for the political satire about liberal elites kidnapping rural Americans and hunting them for sport is focusing on complaints.
Movies
The way pandemics are portrayed on screen could convince you never to leave your house again. But some of these movies contain useful advice.
We’re in the middle of a renaissance of sorts when it comes to high-profile movies and TV shows with strong ties to Las Vegas.
Use Feb. 29 to finally see some of these films you should see some day but keep putting off.
For its 16th edition, which starts Thursday, the festival is adding Monday screenings to better showcase the winning films.
Of the nine movies up for the top prize at Sunday’s awards, only “Parasite” and “Marriage Story” are contemporary tales.
To mark the convergence of the Super Bowl and the Oscars, celebrate these football players who’ve found varying levels of success as actors.
Just don’t expect to see the two Netflix films nominated for best picture.
For its 19th edition, scheduled for Thursday through Jan. 26, the festival is reaching farther outside the tent than ever before.
It’s always hard to tell what will connect with audiences this far out. After all, this time last year, “Cats” looked like a technological marvel and surefire smash.
For the most part, the big-screen adaptation of the Andrew Lloyd Webber mega-musical succeeds only in raising an alarming number of questions.
To appropriate R.E.M.’s rapid-fire 1987 anthem: It’s the end of “Star Wars” as we know it, and I feel fine.
You know you’re in for a wild couple of months at the movies when the phrase “Oscar buzz for Adam Sandler” isn’t the most jarringly discordant thing you’ll encounter.
Nicolas Cage, a Las Vegas resident, is to play a character desperate to get a role in a new Quentin Tarantino movie.
The gangster epic, which opened Friday, is at the heart of a long-running dispute between Netflix and movie theater owners.