The anime movie, subtitled “Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle,” contains layers of lore and impressionistic backdrops.
A drama about the rise and fall and rise again of a founder of Tinder and Bumble suffers from some flimsiness.
Set in Finland, this film explores a season of grief and growth for a girl, her father and her grandmother.
The art of persuasion — and the painstaking preparation for a national competition — is the focus of this moving documentary about high-school students.
Based on a true story, this blandly inspirational tale follows a 59-year old man from Texas who rejoins his college football squad.
This probing, troubling documentary looks at the sociological implications of the series “To Catch a Predator.”
Lucas (Tom Blyth) has just had sex with Andrew (Russell Tovey), the man he was supposed to arrest in a sting operation.
The dark comedy follows a man who suffers an identity crisis after his work at a companion-for-hire agency extinguishes his own personality.
Six years in the making, this new documentary traces Ye’s life of fame and fall from grace.
In this thriller, a young quarterback is invited to train with a veteran player (Marlon Wayans) in his Texas compound. What could go wrong?
This fantastical odyssey, starring Colin Farrell and Margot Robbie, relies on the tart charm of Phoebe Waller-Bridge.
The actress Pat Crowley early in her career, in 1955.
The distinctive villain inspired performers across the globe almost instantly. No one’s waiting for Halloween.
Samuel Barnett, left, as Viola, and Mark Rylance, as Olivia, in the Shakespeare’s Globe production of “Twelfth Night” on Broadway in 2013.
A drama about a Palestinian boy who sneaks into Israel won the top prize at Israel’s version of the Oscars. The country’s culture minister called the ceremony “shameful.”
“It Was Just an Accident,” the Palme d’Or winner, will be eligible for best international feature. Its director criticized the selection process by nondemocratic countries.
In a memorable 1962 episode of “The Twilight Zone,” the actor, still in his early 20s, played the most charming emissary of the afterlife imaginable.
Robert Redford, left, and Paul Newman in “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.”
The Outlaw, the Romantic, the Survivor: From the Sundance Kid to his final role, he showed different ways to be a hero onscreen.
Robert Redford filming “Three Days of the Condor.” He gave the character an edge while remaining deeply sympathetic.