Movies and pop stars wrestled with faith in 2025. That may be changing culture. By Lauren Jackson I’m the host of Believing. I often feel like a journalistic Gretel. I’m constantly picking up ...
On Thursday night, Netflix threw a holiday party for some of its departments at Los Angeles restaurant Delilah, decorating the cozy space with a Tinseltown/Old Hollywood theme. But the holiday cheer ...
The business of Hollywood was in trouble long before the earth-rattling news that Netflix had inked a $72 billion takeover of Warner Bros. And while the deal is widely seen as a coup by Netflix, once ...
"Jay Kelly" might be the closest thing we ever get to "George Clooney: The Movie." Director Noah Baumbach's bittersweet dramedy (★★★½ out of four; rated R; in select theaters now, streaming on Netflix ...
Los Angeles is replete with landmark real estate, from triumphs of design by Richard Neutra, John Lautner, and John Elgin Woolf to less name-brand mega-mansions. Yet across time, movie stars, moguls, ...
For a movie that sounds like a euphemism for something really filthy, it’s hardly surprising that Chloe Sevigny’s role in The Brown Bunny caused a sensation, even more so when it became clear that the ...
There’s one reliable group of moviegoers left in America—and they can’t go to the movies by themselves. This week, the kids who make up the industry’s target audience will be heading to theaters for ...
One of the most recognizable movie theaters in the world is poised for a major comeback, thanks to the backing of filmmaker Jason Reitman and a host of other Hollywood A-list directors. The collective ...
It has been a brutal three months for dramas and comedies. By Brooks Barnes Reporting from Los Angeles Some were heavily marketed. Many were championed by critics. Most had star power. But not one of ...
Diego Pineda has been a devout storyteller his whole life. He has self-published a fantasy novel and a book of short stories, and is actively working on publishing his second novel. A lifelong fan of ...
Movie producer Neal Moritz recently flew to New York for his first pitch to the man who controls the screens everyone in Hollywood wants: the chief executive of IMAX. Moritz connected his laptop to a ...