Starring the eponymous hip-hop group and Michael Fassbender, Sundance prizewinner “Kneecap” is what “8 Mile” might look like if it had been directed by John Carney.
Chris Feil is a freelance entertainment writer and co-host of the podcast This Had Oscar Buzz. His previous work has been featured in Vanity Fair, Thrillist, Gawker, Vulture, Polygon, and elsewhere.
Bette Midler, Susan Sarandon, Sheryl Lee Ralph, and Megan Mullally star in a bachelorette romp that’s chintzy but pleasingly familiar—and very funny.
The star of “Bonnie and Clyde” and “Network” gets a well-deserved career retrospective, even if it avoids most of the hard questions and only glances at her notorious reputation.
The year in film was not just about Barbenheimer. Here’s a rundown of the best international films of 2023—and our guess on the ones who will likely be competing for the Oscar.
With stellar performances in two of the year’s best and buzziest films—“Anatomy of a Fall” and “The Zone of Interest”—Sandra Hüller is already being dubbed “Actress of the Year.”
Because of the Hollywood strikes, the starpower at the Toronto International Film Festival is owed to actors who are directing their own films—few of which, it turns out, are good.
The Lars von Trier film starring Nicole Kidman was polarizing, to say the least, when it premiered. Two decades later, it’s clear it may have changed Cannes—and movies—forever.
The new horror film already has a cult following after its fright-inducing run at film festivals and going viral with terrified TikTok users.
There’s nothing Hollywood—and the Oscars—love more than turning tragedy into “prestige” films. But this year, movies like “The Whale” and “The Son” have taken the trend too far.
The veteran director’s new film, “The Fabelmans,” could add Michelle Williams and Judd Hirsch to the surprisingly short list of actors who’ve been nominated for his movies.