In his work, he often returned to Manzanar, the camp in which he and his family, along with thousands of other people of Japanese descent, were interned during World War II.
Across film (“Sinners,” “One Battle After Another”), theater (“Ragtime”) and TV (“The Lowdown”), four works suggested what achieving racial equality in America would take.
Russell Brand at a London courthouse in May.
“The Queen of Versailles,” which opened at the St. James Theater on Nov. 9, was adapted from Lauren Greenfield’s 2012 documentary about a couple seeking to build a palatial home in Florida.
Ms. Britt and Mr. Davis at their wedding in November 1960. It was reported that the event had been delayed from October at the request of John F. Kennedy’s presidential campaign to avoid negative attention before the election.
Seven takeaways from the final episodes of “The End of an Era,” the Disney+ series exploring her globe-trotting concert extravaganza.
Yes, “KPop Demon Hunters” makes the list. But that was just one of the standouts in a great year.
Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sinbad, Phil Hartman and Rita Wilson served a platter of high-octane holiday high jinks in this unhinged 1996 comedy.
The British actress’s directorial debut, “Goodbye June,” is based on a script written by her son and follows a fractured family reuniting in the hospital over the holidays.
We polled film experts in the newsroom. These are the titles that stuck with us this year.
Clockwise from top left: Robert Redford, Diane Keaton, Roberta Flack, David Lynch, and Brian Wilson.
James Cameron’s third “Avatar” movie debuted to an estimated $345 million worldwide.
From left: Kate Louissant, Gillian Han, Tatianna Córdoba and Carly Gendell at the Greenwich House Theater in Manhattan.
Onscreen, she tends to play women fighting the patriarchy; offscreen the image she cultivates has meant conservatives consider her one of their own.
The couple are gearing up for the Broadway opening of “Bug,” about a descent into paranoia and psychosis in a squalid motel room.
She had been working with refugees and channeled her anger over their situation into the ferocious performance, which was filmed several years ago.
Theodor Pistek in 2017. A racecar driver, artist and costume designer, he was best known for creating clothes for two Milos Forman films set in the 18th century, “Amadeus” and “Valmont.”
Kaouther Ben Hania’s dramatized feature about a Palestinian girl who is killed in Gaza City is both powerfully direct and purposefully removed.
For the franchise’s third movie, James Cameron throws in new creatures, new landscapes, melodramatic plot lines and big battle sequences. It’s a lot.
The release of a “Spinal Tap” concert film that was filmed at Stonehenge has been delayed.