In adapting a sweeping and cerebral trilogy for TV, the new show forgets one of the original story’s biggest themes.
The director of The Zone of Interest accepted his award with an anti-war speech that drew praise and confusion.
Da’Vine Joy Randolph was grateful to win an Academy Award—and hopeful that it won’t be her last opportunity.
FX’s epic new series is bringing unusual complexity to the beloved figure of the samurai.
Julio Torres’s existential comedy Problemista is a marvelous mixture of surrealism and social satire.
The best installment of the Hong Kong–based drama connects the privileged protagonists with a society they inhabit at a distance.
Time travel, Sasquatches, Kristen Stewart in a mullet—here are our favorite movies from this year’s Sundance Film Festival.
Sasquatch Sunset is the latest in a long line of art-house films that turn viewing into an endurance test.
Society of the Snow is an often-nightmarish—but wildly absorbing—viewing experience.
By paying tribute to the great shows of yesteryear, the ceremony argued for television as a shared culture.
Hosting awards shows is a truly thankless job.
Hollywood’s awards shows will overlook these films—but you shouldn’t.
The movie musical is a tear-jerking and exultant epic that also works as a companion piece to the 1985 original.
The year’s most essential series
The Zone of Interest is an eerie and restrained study of the Holocaust that never shows a single frame of the atrocity.
The duo behind the fantastical film Poor Things talk sex, trust, and self-discovery.
Todd Haynes’s film is a beautiful, terrible nesting doll of a story with a uniquely twisted core.
Spoiler alert: They don’t die.
The series succeeded not because it had a clear political philosophy, but because it understood the power of entertainment above all.
The comedian's newest show, The Curse, is weird and off-putting, yet intensely compelling.