“It’s very liberating to take off that psychological corset,” the actress said of portraying the rambunctious Hollywood star Ava Gardner onstage.
The writer-director Zach Cregger (“Barbarian”) creates and maintains an ominous mood in this horror movie about missing children.
In the artist Julian Glander’s curiously creative animated comedy, a teenage food delivery courier traverses a Floridian suburb that suggests a Richard Scarry town on acid.
The disturbing drawings of a grieving child come to life in this so-so children’s horror movie.
A serial killer named Mr. Shiny gets the true-crime treatment in Stuart Ortiz’s disturbing faux documentary.
This anti-comedy from the writer-director Jim Hosking is a singularly annoying and abrasive experience.
Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis are back with even more body-swapping in a sequel to the 2003 comedy.
Six years after its French release, the movie is screening in New York. It’s the first Roman Polanski movie to open in the U.S. since 2014.
In this directorial debut by Kristin Scott Thomas, three sisters reunite to celebrate their mother’s third marriage.
This largely by-the-book documentary about the musician Jeff Buckley is most memorable for highlighting the earnest, sensitive soul behind the music.
“From May onward, I’m watching films for eight, sometimes 10 to 12 hours a day,” Dennis Lim said.
Jenna Ortega, left, and Emma Myers in a scene from the Season 2 premiere of “Wednesday.”
Lin-Manuel Miranda’s much-loved musical opened on Broadway a decade ago, ushering in a new era of race-conscious casting, audience outreach and even stardom.
Stanley Tucci and Meryl Streep, center, filmed a scene on the steps of the American Museum of Natural History.
Juliet Prowse and Sal Mineo in Joseph Cates’s “Who Killed Teddy Bear.”
“It felt very comfortable to not feel so stressed about preparing,” Lohan, left, with Curtis, said about returning to her role as Anna.
In this Amazon Prime Video action-comedy, Keke Palmer hijacks an armored truck driven by Eddie Murphy and Pete Davidson.
In new films by Chloé Zhao and Maggie Gyllenhaal, Buckley bolsters her reputation for playing the most complicated of roles.
Risk-taking actresses like Jessie Buckley remind us why performers who live to perform are so vital.
Superman, who made his first appearance in 1938, was celebrated with a statue in Cleveland, where the character was conceived.