Actors on Actors
The pairs for Season 11 of “Variety Studio: Actors on Actors” include Brad Pitt and Adam Sandler, Jennifer Lopez and Robert Pattinson, and Shia LaBeouf and Kristen Stewart.
The pairs for Season 11 of “Variety Studio: Actors on Actors” include Brad Pitt and Adam Sandler, Jennifer Lopez and Robert Pattinson, and Shia LaBeouf and Kristen Stewart.
Stephen King’s 2013 sequel to “The Shining” gets turned into a movie that’s long and prosaic, but also creepy and scary.
Emilia Clarke and Henry Golding are the appealing stars of a fairy-tale rom-com that’s too precious and contrived to take wing.
Roland Emmerich stages the Battle of Midway as a convincing historical combat spectacle, though his storytelling remains B-movie basic.
Noah Baumbach’s divorce drama is so accomplished it elevates the writer-director of “The Squid and the Whale” to a new level.
Based on “The Golden Compass,” the new HBO drama stars Lin-Manuel Miranda and Dafne Keen.
“High School Musical: The Musical: The Series” is upfront about delivering its gentle twist on an aggressively inoffensive franchise.
Damon Lindelof’s adaptation tackles the ways individuals are wrecked by history, though it lacks the necessary focus.
HBO’s “Mrs. Fletcher” is a pleasing character study with points to make about the ways the sexual revolution has failed men and women.
The musical by Howard Ashman and Alan Menken gets a starry, but small-scale Off Broadway revival starring Jonathan Groff.
Brian Cox (“Succession”) takes over from Bryan Cranston in Robert Schenkkan’s follow-up play to his Tony-winning “All the Way.”
“Almost Famous” fans get their backstage pass renewed via a stage musical adaptation in San Diego that feels familiar and refreshing.
Jonathan Pryce and Eileen Atkins play an elderly husband and wife, one of whom might be dead.
Kanye West’s unfocused and frustrating “Jesus Is King” contains flashes of inspiration — divine and otherwise — but that’s all.
This box set tackles a classic with less need of a spit-polish and not as many raw demos in the vault. Still necessary? Completely.
The follow-up to his 2018’s album mostly goes to softer places, but he still wants to nurture his bad-boy side, too.
Sheryl Crow is vowing this is her final full-length album. If so, it’s a heck of a retirement banquet.