The streaming giant is releasing “Mudbound” — one of the most buzzed-about movies this year at Sundance — in just 17 theaters for Oscar qualifying purposes on Nov. 17, the same day you can watch it for free on your phone.
Christopher Lawrence
Christopher Lawrence is the movie critic for the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
clawrence@reviewjournal.com … @life_onthecouch on Twitter. 702-380-4567
There’s no place like the multiplex for the holidays.
Grab a bag of leftover Halloween candy and curl up in front of the television.
The best thing about the Marvel Cinematic Universe is that all the movies are connected. Unfortunately, that’s also the worst thing.
During a brief trip to Earth — err, Midgard — Thor (Chris Hemsworth) is approached by a female fan hoping for a selfie. “Sorry Jane dumped you,” she consoles him, before he awkwardly stammers out something about how the dumping was mutual.
You’ve already devoured “Stranger Things 2,” and it isn’t even Halloween. So now what?
Sean Baker is so skilled at making ugliness appear beautiful, I’d love to turn him loose on some of my childhood photos.
The boys, and Eleven, are back in the second season of “Stranger Things.”
You spend a full summer promoting a series about a gorgeous naked lady covered in cryptic tattoos inside a duffel bag, and of course I’m going to tune in.
You shouldn’t judge a movie by its trailer. This weekend’s “Geostorm,” though, looks laughably bad.
The film chronicles the story of the Prescott (Arizona) Fire Department’s Granite Mountain Hotshots and the historic 2013 Yarnell Hill Fire.
For a movie with “Mark Felt” in its title, writer-director Peter Landesman’s (“Concussion”) historical drama rarely allows viewers to get to know Watergate whistleblower Mark Felt.
The biopic, starring Chadwick Boseman as soon-to-be legal legend Thurgood Marshall, is the filmmaking equivalent of a collective exhale.
“Wonder Woman” has been one of the biggest and best surprises of the moviegoing year.
The show kicks off — unbelievably — its 28th season Sunday on ABC