Dea Kulumbegashvili in Berlin. Her film “April” won’t be released in her native Georgia, she said, “because no one wants to deal with something that would cause a problem with the authorities,”
A fierce advocate of sexual liberation, she pushed the alternative weekly to cover women’s issues, as well as gay rights and avant-garde culture.
The greatest filmmaker of postwar Japan found a new way to show life onscreen.
Ben Affleck reprises his role as Christian Wolff for “The Accountant 2.”
In this heartfelt wildlife documentary, a volunteer conservationist and an endangered critter develop a parent-child connection.
In fictional tales and documentaries, directors approached him as a screen character who was both admired and controversial.
Ethel Lina White in an undated photograph. She eschewed fame, telling one reporter: “I was not born. I have never been educated and have no tastes or hobbies.”
The director’s latest stars Vincent Cassel as an entrepreneur who mourns the death of his wife by inventing technology that surveils her entombed body.
A retelling of Ang Lee’s classic of queer cinema comes at the same farcical situation in a new way.
David Cronenberg’s latest film, “The Shrouds,” was initially conceived as a series he pitched to Netflix.
The actor, also seen in “The Righteous Gemstones” and the new movie “The Uninvited,” on dirt biking, his father’s clothing advice and the music that makes him think of Rick Hatchett.
Film and television production in Los Angeles is down by more than one-third over the past 10 years, according to FilmLA data.
In the 1960s and ’70s, his leggy femmes fatales beckoned from paperback covers and posters for movies like “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” and “Thunderball.”
John Cena has gone from a professional wrestling headliner to an actor seen in many blockbuster films and a star-vehicle TV show.
Daisy Ridley in “Cleaner.”
Tom Cullen, left and Chris New have inspired chemistry in “Weekend,” from 2011.
The subtle expression of longing in the 2005 adaptation wasn’t meant to be a key moment. Even the director is surprised it took on a life of its own.
Whether you’re a casual moviegoer or an avid buff, our reviewers think these films are worth knowing about.
The film “1-800-ON-HER-OWN” follows the fiercely independent artist as she tries a career first: writing a song with another artist.
Catherine Deneuve plays the former French first lady Bernadette Chirac in this puckish, highly fictionalized biopic with a pop-feminist edge.