Cannes Unsold Gems: The Best Films Yet to Land U.S. DistributionFrom a Federico Fellini homage with Lily James and Willem Dafoe and a doc about attempts to unionize Amazon workers to a magnum opus of family dysfunction, here are five titles still up for sale. THR puts the spotlight on the best films from the festival circuit that have yet to land a U.S.
Virginia Woolf on Why We Read and What Great Works of Art Have in Common“Any live mind today is of the very same stuff as Plato’s & Euripides. It is only a continuation & development of the same thing.”
At Cannes, the Dogs Were Good Again This YearOn the morning the Cannes Film Festival opened, Messi, the canine hero of last year’s Palme d’Or-winning “Anatomy of a Fall,” was practicing climbing the stairs of the Grand Lumière Theater.
NCT Dream, Seventeen, Le Sserafim, NewJeans and others win top-ranking spots on Billboard's World Albums chartBillboard has announced its latest World Albums chart for the past week, and K-pop music's undeniable and indomitable fury is indisputably leading the list. The week ending on May 18 welcomed SM Entertainment boy group NCT Dream's sixth mini-album, Dream()scape, to the World Albums chart.
Kendrick Lamar Went No. 1 on His Own. What Does That Mean for TDE?Kendrick Lamar went to war with Drake and shot to the top of the Billboard charts … without Top Dawg Entertainment. As TDE turns 20, here’s what life looks like for the label after Kendrick.
Miranda July’s New Novel Will Ignite Your Group ChatsThere is something vague and unseeing in the gaze young women cast at older ones.
Francis Ford Coppola’s Megabudget New Movie Is a Journey Into the Heart of MadnessFrancis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis took 41 years to make. It might take as long to understand. Coppola’s magnum opus, which premiered in competition at the Cannes Film Festival last night, is a movie of extraordinary highs and baffling lows, alternately dazzling and confounding.
‘Hit Man’ Was Made for Movie TheatersEarly on in Richard Linklater’s Hit Man, Gary Johnson (played by Glen Powell, who cowrote the film with Linklater) informs us that in real life, hit men don’t exist—who would even consider killing people as a job and risk years in jail, or worse?
‘My whole library is wiped out’: what it means to own movies and TV in the age of streaming servicesWhat rights do you have to the digital movies, TV shows and music you buy online? That question was on the minds of Telstra TV Box Office customers this month after the company announced it would shut down the service in June.
Hollywood at a Crossroads: “Everyone Is Using AI, But They Are Scared to Admit It”Despite the recent labor actions to combat it, Hollywood has already started using artificial intelligence, presenting the industry with the existential threat that many predicted. For horror fans, Late Night With the Devil marked one of the year’s most anticipated releases.
The 15 Best Gen X Movies of All TimeGenerations are defined by many things: their fashion sense, their colloquial slang, their politics, whether they attended Woodstock, watched TRL as a kid, or owned Taylor Swift’s country album in CD form.
The Best Music of 2024 So FarPitchfork’s editors are already thinking about what albums have left the biggest impressions and will land a coveted spot on our year-end list.
Deaf girl is cured and can hear again after first ever gene therapyOpal Sandy, aged 18 months, was born completely deaf due to the condition auditory neuropathy, which is caused by the disruption of nerve impulses travelling from the inner ear to the brain.
‘At the start you get molested and by 45 you’re too old to work’ – the secret misery of women working in TV‘When is the good time to be a woman in TV?” asks Michelle Reynolds, a former TV producer and director. “In the start you get molested and infantilised, in the middle if you have babies they won’t let you work flexibly, then when you get past 45 you’re too bloody old.
Jimmy Kimmel Unleashed at Disney Upfronts: “We’re Building One Big Ad-Supported Pile of Sh**”Here are the late-night host's best — and most brutal — jokes from Disney's annual upfront presentation to advertisers. Jimmy Kimmel rarely holds back during his annual monologue to Disney advertisers, but this year he was particularly brutal about the state of the business.