Now 20 years old, this love story about two sheepherders is being rereleased in theaters. Here’s a look at what it meant to pop culture, then and now.
Stephanie Nur, left, and Jay Ellis in “Duke & Roya” at the Lucille Lortel Theater in Manhattan.
Producing or directing, he made more than 50 films over 50 years, including a series on the English language and an exploration of J. Edgar Hoover’s secret life.
The sequel had a tough act to follow, but it still delivered a terrifying monster movie with grand sequences, a sweeping score and an indelible tagline.
A theater family sorts out its offstage drama in a coming-of-age movie starring Bryan Cranston and Allison Janney.
“‘Harlem Shuffle,’ ‘Crook Manifesto,’ ‘Underground Railroad,’ ‘Nickel Boys’: I feel like I did not understand or see myself in fiction until I read him.”
Michelle Williams will play the main character, opposite Mike Faist as her love interest, in a revival of Eugene O’Neill’s “Anna Christie” at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn.
Films including “Jodorowsky’s Dune” and Owen Kline’s “Funny Pages” delve into the pain and anguish — and brief ecstasy — of making art.
We catch you up on the “28” franchise, including the new movie, with commentary from the films’ screenwriter Alex Garland.
The director Dean DeBlois narrates a sequence from his live-action film, starring Mason Thames as Hiccup.
Three directors are credited for Pixar’s latest film, but not all are listed onscreen at the same time. Here’s the back story.
This month’s picks include a full-throttle vampire movie, a heartbreaking ghost story, a creature-feature comedy and more.
Whether you’re a casual moviegoer or an avid buff, our reviewers think these films are worth knowing about.
Starting June 23, we’ll unveil a list of 100, as voted on by directors, actors and other notable names in Hollywood and around the world. Make sure you’re getting updates.
In a new documentary, the actress talks about the prejudice and loneliness she faced after becoming the rare Hollywood star who is deaf.
Dean DeBlois narrates a sequence from the live-action film featuring Mason Thames.
The director returns to the postapocalyptic Britain he conjured in his 2002 movie “28 Days Later,” this time with a father and son running from the infected. Mom joins in, too.
Beyond the somewhat silly premise of this Netflix animated film is a charming, funny and artfully punchy original universe.
An orphaned boy is whisked away on a visually wondrous cosmic adventure, but he returns home with mostly reassuring lessons.
This newly restored screwball comedy is a buoyant romp. The director revisits and refines the techniques used here in his later work in other genres.