Na Jaane Kaun Aa Gaya aims to connect with audiences through situations and conflicts that feel familiar in today’s social ...
Mendoza's football IQ, ability to quickly translate on the field what he's taught, work ethic and physical traits set him ...
And it will change the way she looks at the animal kingdom forever. For critics of a certain age — that is, mine — “Hoppers” ...
Who’s your favorite rock star? A common answer might be anyone … not counting Elvis because he’s my real favorite. There is ...
Seth MacFarlane's Ted concludes with big laughs, hidden sweetness, and crude, filthy, ruthless jokes. Read our review.
The Bride! is a swooning, soot-streaked fever dream of a movie, the kind that feels less like a retelling and more like a ...
Only seconds in, I regretted leaving my trusty torch and pitchfork at home because this bride should have been left at the ...
In 1903, a young Japanese man who called himself Frank Matsura came to live in the central Washington town of Conconully.
At the center of “The Bride!” is Buckley, who by the film’s second weekend in theaters is likely to be a newly minted Oscar-winner. While the anguished mother of “Hamnet” is quite a different role ...
In The Bride!, with a screenplay and direction by Gyllenhaal, we're transported to a 1930s Chicago reimagined through a ...
Debuting her column, “What I’ve Scene Lately,” Loquet dives into the edgy, controversial “Wuthering Heights” adaptation.
Jessie Buckley commands Maggie Gyllenhaal's 'The Bride,' but the feminist horror movie is both conspicuously DC-coded and ...