A decade after it got into the movie business, Amazon AMZN0.63%increase; green up pointing triangle has its first major box-office hit. “Project Hail Mary,” a science-fiction adventure starring Ryan ...
The “Melania” documentary about first lady Melania Trump debuted at the top of Amazon Prime’s streaming charts after premiering earlier this week. The documentary, which follows 20 days in the first ...
Have you been to a doctor recently? Or seen a nurse? Lucky you if your doctor or nurse graduated long ago! Americans’ trust in the medical profession has tanked — from 73% confidence in medical ...
Zendaya and Robert Pattinson are navigating a complicated love story in their upcoming movie The Drama. Zendaya and Pattinson costar in the romantic drama as engaged couple Emma Harwood and Charlie ...
Jason Statham is back to doing what he does best in “Shelter” – kill bad guys and save people. The latest film in the action star’s filmography drops in theaters this weekend and finds him as a man ...
Amazon executives were brainstorming a list of female directors in late 2024 for a documentary about Melania Trump, a project the company had bid $40 million to distribute. What some of these ...
Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson's musical drama "Song Sung Blue," which chronicles the real-life story of a Neil Diamond tribute band that rose to regional stardom in the 1990s, is now available to watch ...
From iconic final girls to Universal monsters, The Hollywood Reporter rounds up scary films coming this year. By Lexi Carson Associate Editor 'Scream 7,' '28 Years Later: The Bone Temple,' 'The Bride!
There’s been a rumbling in the world of The Last Airbender. Years after Paramount announced that Avatar would make the animated leap to the big screen with a new movie about Aang and his friends, that ...
After a long run in movie theaters and digital buy/rent windows, the blockbuster F1: The Movie is finally available to stream for free on Apple TV. If you aren’t an Apple TV subscriber yet, you can ...
2025 was a year that posed a lot of questions for movie lovers: Did the success of Sinners prove that there was still a mass audience hungry for original (read: non-IP) stories on a blockbuster level?