Spend your week at the Bellagio conservatory, rocking out to Queen or listening to rapper Travis Scott.
Christopher Lawrence
Christopher Lawrence is the movie critic for the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
clawrence@reviewjournal.com … @life_onthecouch on Twitter. 702-380-4567
From stars to snowdrifts, there’s nothing quite like the annual moviegoing extravaganza in Park City, Utah. This list offers a taste of the festival.
The streaming giant is facing some serious threats to its dominance.
Not only is there more good TV now than ever before, the quality is almost absurdly high.
The Showtime comedy series, starring Don Cheadle, debuts Sunday.
In HBO’s “Brexit”, Benedict Cumberbatch stars as rogue political adviser Dominic Cummings, whose blunt style and general disdain for political niceties and politicians make him a controversial choice as the lead strategist behind the Vote Leave campaign.
The 18th annual Las Vegas Jewish Film Festival is a celebration of “chai.” As in the Hebrew word for “life,” not the type of tea.
Review-Journal reporter Christopher Lawrence looks back on the tarnished history of the Golden Globes.
If it seems like there aren’t enough hours in the day to keep up with all the TV shows out there, well, you’re right. There aren’t.
It’s still very early, but 2019 at the movies is shaping up to look a lot like the past several years with one fairly large exception: Unlike 2018, there’s a “Star Wars” movie people might actually go see.
We round up the best holiday episodes from classic shows you can stream right now on Netflix and Hulu.
If your date orders the “When Harry Met Salad,” will you have what she’s having?
Much like Whitney Houston, Marvel Television believes that children are its future. Or at least 20-somethings playing teenagers.
“Love Actually” just may be the quintessential modern Christmas movie. Here are 15 reasons why.
For its third NBC event, airing at 10 p.m. Monday, Pentatonix delivers Kelly Clarkson, the Backstreet Boys and Maren Morris, along with Penn Teller.