Given everything that’s transpired over the past year, there’s never been a better time to be in the women’s film festival business.
Christopher Lawrence
Christopher Lawrence escaped his native Kentucky without an accent thanks to the thousands of hours he spent in front of a television as a child. That’s also why he never learned how to ride a bicycle. He’s been writing about TV and movies since his days at Murray State University, when the school’s basketball coach had him reassigned at the student newspaper after just one story about the team. He’s been a professional TV critic since 2000, the Review-Journal’s TV critic since 2005 and its movie critic since 2012.
You don’t tug on Superman’s cape. Jim Croce warned against that way back in 1972.
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 Zak Bagans were a character in a horror movie, you’d never stop screaming at him.
The “Wheel of Fortune” Wheelmobile comes to Las Vegas on March 24 and 25.
The crime drama, starring Jack Cutmore-Scott, debuts Sunday.
The singer’s effort to bridge the gap between members of the LGBTQ and Mormon communities is chronicled in the documentary “Believer,” which hosted a red-carpet VIP screening Thursday at the MGM Grand.
Superpowered private investigator Jessica Jones (Krysten Ritter), who’s been spending far too much time drinking and engaging in random sex, lies in bed, dead to the world, until her assistant, Malcolm (Eka Darville), knocks on the door that separates her bedroom from what passes for their office.
If you see only one movie this year after taking peyote, make it “A Wrinkle in Time.”
Twelve months after Faye Dunaway announced the wrong best-picture winner, she and Warren Beatty returned Sunday to hand the statue to Guillermo del Toro for “The Shape of Water.”
Amid all the awful news out of Hollywood in recent months, host Jimmy Kimmel has his work cut out for him in trying to create a fun atmosphere at the 90th Oscars.
Students receive training in psychological manipulation and seduction.
Popularity and acclaim are two very different metrics. If they weren’t, McDonald’s would be the best restaurant on the planet.
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.
You know that comedy technique where writers and directors take a joke that’s sort of funny, let it linger until it becomes just mildly amusing, step back while it festers so that it becomes painfully awkward and loses every bit of its appeal before they stretch it so far that it ends up being hilarious?
