Director lets just a few things slip after ‘keeping secrets for two years.’
As the Harvey Weinstein sex abuse case continues to unfold, it’s clear things will never be the same again for the Hollywood realm the disgraced mogul thought he controlled. This is a good thing, says movie critic Peter Howell
“That’s just how she was,” said Heather Ross, after telling the story on a radio show Tuesday. “She stood up for people.”
Stars began dating in 2014 while making movie The Light Between Oceans after meeting the year before in Toronto.
Angela Robinson says she fought to take screen time on depicting three-way relationship of character’s creator.
“It’s so sad how vicious people are being when I basically live to make things better for women,” Bialik addressed the backlash early Sunday morning via a message posted on Twitter.
Allen, who was accused of sexually abusing his 7-year-old daughter in 1993, drew harsh criticism on social media after warning against a “witch hunt atmosphere” regarding the Weinstein allegations.
Mini reviews of the week's new releases including The Foreigner, Mark Felt, Goodbye Christopher Robin, BPM and 78/52.
Model Chrissy Teigen, and actors Anna Paquin, Mark Ruffalo and John Cusack said they would take part in boycotting the social media platform.
Horror fest shares local screens with Indigenous and green offerings.
Veteran actor drawing Oscar buzz for The Florida Project says he’s glad to not be playing a comic-book movie antagonist.
Adults face tough times but youngsters’ world has beauty in one of year’s best films.
You can’t see Jessica Rothe’s self-centred sorority sister get murdered enough in this freshly irreverent horror-comedy.
Mini reviews of new theatrical openers Lucky, Rebel in the Rye, Loving Vincent, Great Great Great and My Life Pony: The Movie.
Implausible survival romance stars Kate Winslet and Idris Elba but the pooch is the real star.
Denis Villeneneuve's Blade Runner sequel, starring Ryan Gosling and Harrison Ford, brilliantly continues the story of the hunt for artificial humans in a bleak new future world.
Brief reviews of new theatrical openers Don’t Talk to Irene, White Night and The Midwife, plus Churchill and A Ghost Story on DVD.
Doug Liman’s film shakes up your image of the star in decline, by letting its star play dumb and by revelling in sin, greed, and corruption.
Stephen Frears’ historical drama is a film of solid craftsmanship, led by another magnificent performance by Judi Dench. But matters of lust and colonialism are dealt with only carefully.
Reel Brief reviews of new theatrical openers plus 47 Meters Down on DVD.
Even if you’ve Googled the outcome, or are old enough to remember watching it on television, the film’s reenactment of the epochal 1973 Riggs vs. King tennis match makes for entertaining and at times riveting viewing.
The anarchic spirit and spitball humour of the first two Lego films have been replaced by characters and characters and gags from a faulty assembly line for The Lego Ninjago Movie.
American Assassin director Michael Cuesta knows how to competently stage a fight scene or car chase, but making us care about this committee-written thriller and its two-dimensional characters is a feat that eludes him.
TIFF’s reputation as a showcase for potential Oscars remains intact, but this year there were fewer obvious Best Picture nominees.
The New Brunswick-born actor, who has more than 140 film credits to his name, will be recognized at the Governors Awards on Nov. 11.
While the film won 10 Academy Awards in 1940, it depicts a romanticized view of slavery and life on a Southern plantation before, during and after the Civil War.
Three-time Oscar winner says his last film is Paul Thomas Anderson’s upcoming “Phantom Thread.”
Despite joking last year he would never be asked back, the Academy Awards producers have said Kimmel will return to host once more.
When using a credit card to pay, the suggested gratuity is often 18 per cent instead of the typical 15 per cent. One reader asks whether this is the new normal amount.