Laura Dern and Liam Hemsworth star in a muddled romance without much to say.
A courtroom sketch of Lyle Menendez, left, and his brother, Erik, as seen in the Netflix documentary “The Menendez Brothers.”
In this ribald fictional telling of a young Trump’s rise, the man responsible is the lawyer Roy Cohn, played to sleazy perfection by Jeremy Strong.
The latest documentary from Errol Morris looks at the Trump administration’s practice of taking children from their parents at the southern border.
A brisk documentary by Barnaby Thompson counters that the tuxedo-wearing playwright hid his insecurities under a platinum-plated veneer.
Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield star in this weepie romance that tries to be modern by unfolding over three intersecting timelines.
The deaths remain grisly, but the pacing uneven in this new installment in Damien Leone’s horror franchise.
The producer and musician gets the biographical documentary treatment — with an unexpected twist.
This remake of a hit Thai film about college admissions, starring Callina Liang, adds an element of racial politics to its heist story.
The “Apprentice” stars and the director Ali Abbasi say their film is a “humanistic” treatment of the former president and his mentor, Roy Cohn.
John Lennon and Yoko Ono invade middle-American living rooms in this cute but shallow documentary.
In the musical, Samy Belkessa, left, plays Saïd; Alexander Ferrario plays Vinz; and Alivor plays Hubert.
“So much of the story is about prejudices and false narratives and fake news and real news,” Kline said.
As a group of historians and a top biographer square off, proponents of a middle path see a tangled life in which the superstar of science was, and was not, a true Communist at the same time.
The Criterion delivery van was parked outside the New York Film Festival its first two weekends.
To the extent this documentary about Lyle and Erik Menendez has appeal, it is of the tabloid variety.
In epic takes like “My Undesirable Friends” and playful biopics like “Pavements,” the vital art of the documentary is on full display.
A conversation with the legendary actor about, well, everything.
Francis Ford Coppola used his own fortune to bring his passion project to the screen.
NEW YORK, NY, October 1, 2024: Portrait of actor and producer Saoirse Ronan. Credit: Celeste Sloman for The New York Times