Willem Dafoe is one of the world’s biggest actors — but over five decades on screen, he’s been consistently drawn to oddballs ...
Lee Jung-jae returns to the dystopian Netflix thriller series to try and take down the deadly game from the inside. Read the ...
The MCU’s Multiverse saga has been a bit hit and miss, but What If…? is one of its success stories. Since its 2021 debut, the show has asked weird, dark, funny, and ambitious questions, where ...
Somehow, it’s been half a year already since Ncuti Gatwa’s Fifteenth Doctor last graced our screens. In all fairness, though, having just stopped Jackal God Sutekh from delivering his dust of ...
1977. Famed opera singer Maria Callas (Angelina Jolie) lives quietly in her Paris apartment, mulling over a comeback. But her poor health — and her past — haunts her. As Maria Callas, Jolie is ...
One Hundred Years Of Solitude, the magnum opus by Nobel Prize-winning author Gabriel García Márquez, simply should not work on screen. Even with the blessing of the writer's family, recapturing ...
In this modern of cinematic universes and huge franchises, when it comes to sequels there seems to be one golden rule: Gotta go fast. And if there's anyone who knows a thing or two about going ...
Having enjoyed spells in the Quantum Realm and at Nevermore Academy respectively in recent years, it would be fair to say that Paul Rudd and Jenna Ortega are no strangers to weird shit at this point.
You know how it goes: Christmas arrives and the day bursts forth in a festive explosion of food, crackers and hastily unwrapped gifts, leaving you delighted, exhausted and full of seasonal cheer.
The first season of Netflix anthology series Beef was a masterful study in microaggression and escalation, with Steven Yeun and Ali Wong going to increasingly extreme lengths to one up each other ...
Well, it is Christmas time, so it makes sense that Blumhouse would give us a lovely gift to unwrap – a new The Mummy movie! After several big-screen iterations, including 1932’s version with ...
In Zambia, or at least in Bemba culture, you don't speak ill of the dead — in part because of fear they might hear you. A little spooky perhaps, but mostly a loving belief that these people ...