Black Lives Matter Protests
Covering demonstrations sparked by George Floyd's death
Is it safe to film during coronavirus? One TV movie — "Harvest of the Heart" starring Jonathan Bennett — aimed to find out.
Comedian Chris D’Elia has denied claims of sexual misconduct. D’Elia’s name began trending on social media on Tuesday night after multiple women accused him of trying to engage with them sexually…
As the world slowly recovers from the coronavirus crisis and theaters start reopening, sales agents and distributors, whose business traditionally drives the independent film sector, are facing an…
Cinemark, the country's third-largest movie theater chain, expects to resume business in the U.S. by mid-July.
All told, Hulu's "Love, Simon" spinoff "Love, Victor" ambles along, deliberately bland and pleasantly toothless.
Given the talent and enormous machine behind it, Netflix's "Space Force" with Steve Carell should be better than fine.
"Legendary," a new reality competition series about ballroom culture, is a fascinating and messy study in contrasts.
Hannah Gadsby is the Michael Jordan of stand-up in one way — her stated plans to retire shouldn't be taken seriously.
Spike Lee explores the twin traumas of the war in Vietnam and racial injustice at home in an adventure movie committed to expanding history.
Pete Davidson plays his richest derelict screwup, but Judd Apatow's comedy gives us a terrific character the film is too eager to save.
In this Disney-fied adaptation of the popular YA novel about a criminal mastermind, the character is no longer bad. But the movie sure is.
Dakota Johnson plays a personal assistant and Tracee Ellis Ross is the pop diva she works for in a behind-the-music-industry fairy tale.
Bob Dylan's first album of new material in eight years makes up for lost rhyme with songs that are funny, fascinating, elusive and epic.
Lady Gaga has returned to the dancefloor with "Chromatica," her best album since "Born This Way" — and possibly her best yet.
Offering tough, prescient words of truth to a nation in crisis, Run the Jewels delivers their greatest album yet.
If you don't like any particular song you hear on The 1975's fourth album, stick around — something is bound to click.
With a score by Stephen Schwartz ("Wicked"), this screen-to-stage transfer is so effortful it's enervating.
The moody music and lyrics from the Bob Dylan playbook both define and heighten Conor McPherson's haunting vision of the Depression.
Katori Hall gets belly laughs out of this comedy about an amateur cook trying to create a signature dish while chaos reigns in the kitchen.
Ivo Van Hove dares to fiddle with perfection in this modernized but still respectful re-working of the 1957 masterpiece.
A Variety and iHeartRadio Podcast