One of these movies is what you should watch tonight. This weekend's choices include theatrical releases arriving on streaming like "The Running Man" and "Black Phone 2." There are original streaming ...
What makes a perfect L.A. movie? Some kind of alchemy of curdled glamour, palm trees, ocean spray, conspiracies big and small — and more than a pinch of vanity. From hard-bitten ’40s noirs and ...
Margot Robbie in "Wuthering Heights" (Warner Bros.), "The Mandalorian and Grogu" (Disney) and Ryan Gosling in "Project Hail Mary" (Amazon MGM) New year, new movies. 2026 has arrived, and this year ...
It's been a great year for movies. Revisit the best of the best, already on Netflix, HBO Max, and more. 2025 has come to an end, and with it comes a lot of reflection, both in terms of how the world ...
As 2025 comes to a close, the biggest movies of the year are now available to stream from home — quite literally. Disney’s “Lilo & Stitch” is available on Disney+ after earning more than $1 billion at ...
Spike your eggnog and relax with our list of the finest flicks of the year about invasive AI, soaring superheroes, and Lovecraftian horrors. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an ...
The year at the movies gets a mixed review. For a hefty chunk of 2025, it felt like one flop after another — and not only at the box office. And some of the past 12 months’ boffo hits were puerile ...
From Netflix to Prime Video, and Shudder to the Criterion Channel, here are the best movies coming to each streaming platform this month. Netflix may get most of the attention, but it’s hardly a ...
I’m not going to lie: 2025 was not a year that’s easy to put a rosy spin on, even in the introductory blurb to a list of the year’s best movies. This has been a 12-month period of daily pummeling by ...
Our film critics watch a lot of movies in a year. By December, their viewing slates span international standouts, festival favorites, studio blockbusters, and plenty more in between. Below, Justin ...
2025 was a year that posed a lot of questions for movie lovers: Did the success of Sinners prove that there was still a mass audience hungry for original (read: non-IP) stories on a blockbuster level?