-
Older >
-
If Batman v Superman crushted Jesse Eisenberg’s star, why is DC giving Jason Momoa a second chance?
The Guardian
··
-
The Brutalist is anointed – but key hopefuls locked out at curveball Golden Globes | Peter Bradshaw
The Guardian
··
-
Campus Monde review – Ivorian hopefuls battle to get elusive immigration visas
The Guardian
··
-
The Brutalist, Emilia Pérez and Shōgun triumph at the Golden Globes
The Guardian
··
-
Golden Globes 2025 red carpet: Ariana Grande, Selena Gomez, Timothée Chalamet and more – in pictures
The Guardian
··
-
Golden Globes 2025: Adrien Brody, Demi Moore and Colin Farrell win – live!
The Guardian
··
-
We Live in Time review – Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield star in soggy tearjerker
The Guardian
··
-
‘Friends keep me tethered’: actor Joe Alwyn on fame, dating Taylor Swift and keeping his feet on the ground
The Guardian
··
-
Clues, improvisation and anti-pigeon devices – the vision behind Mike Leigh’s new film Hard Truths
The Guardian
··
-
Nickel Boys review – sublime, immersive adaptation of Colson Whitehead’s haunting reform school novel
The Guardian
··
-
‘The more relaxed you are, the better you are as a human’: Nicole Kidman on Kubrick, sharks and risk-taking
The Guardian
··
-
At 41, was Isabella Rossellini too old to be beautiful in 1994?
The Guardian
··
-
Indie film-maker Jeff Baena dies aged 47
The Guardian
··
-
Embracing X and a turn by Timothée Chalamet: how Bob Dylan is capturing gen Z
The Guardian
··
-
2073 review – Asif Kapadia’s harrowing vision of a post-apocalyptic world
The Guardian
··
-
Nikki Amuka-Bird: ‘I just played the prime minister and thought, me? Run the country?’
The Guardian
··
-
The Baldoni-Lively legal battle seems a depressing re-run of Depp v Heard | Arwa Mahdawi
The Guardian
··
-
Why did so many people jump to criticise Blake Lively? The answer isn’t complicated
The Guardian
··
-
From Edvard Munch to Central Cee: Observer critics choose their cultural highlights for 2025
The Guardian
··
-
The big chill: warming, nourishing culture to help you hibernate until spring
The Guardian
··
-
Golden Globes 2025: who will win and who should win the film awards?
The Guardian
··
-
Mark Kermode on… director Sean Baker, who thrillingly puts the marginalised centre stage
The Guardian
··
-
From Nosferatu to Patience: a complete guide to this week’s entertainment in the UK
The Guardian
··
-
Justin Baldoni plans to sue Blake Lively after she accused him of harassment
The Guardian
··
-
At the dive-in: Australia’s summer tradition of swimming pool film screenings
The Guardian
··
-
Hollywood ushers in hard-to-predict awards season with Golden Globes
The Guardian
··
-
Elon Musk, the Titan disaster and Sly Stone: the most anticipated documentaries of 2025
The Guardian
··
-
Andrew Garfield on weepie rom-com We Live in Time: ‘I love that this film wears its heart on its sleeve’
The Guardian
··
-
Stolen skulls and colonial trauma: the Tanzanians searching for ancestral remains
The Guardian
··
-
‘Are we the first generation that won’t die?’: Bryan Johnson on his controversial lifestyle
The Guardian
··
-
Aaron Taylor-Johnson: ‘I couldn’t understand why Tom Ford wanted me to play a serial-killer rapist’
The Guardian
··
-
Canceling the apocalypse? What can we learn from films set in 2025
The Guardian
··
-
Ridley Scott is a genius film-maker who can do anything – even start a political crisis in Malta
The Guardian
··
-
Rocco and His Brothers review – Luchino Visconti’s operatically magnificent family epic
The Guardian
··
-
Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni file lawsuits over It Ends With Us
The Guardian
··
-
We Live in Time review – romance blossoms for Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield
The Guardian
··
-
Stockholm Bloodbath review – like Game of Thrones scripted by Guy Ritchie
The Guardian
··
-
Auteurs assemble! Why 2025 offers a banquet of movies by cinema’s great creators
The Guardian
··
-
Kate Beckinsale says she has been ‘assaulted’ and ‘felt up’ on film sets
The Guardian
··
-
Guardian writers on their ultimate feelgood movies: ‘Radical in its own way’
The Guardian
··
-
Toyboys, divas and Bridget Jones: the films to look forward to in 2025
The Guardian
··
-
Beezel review – impish jump-scare machine follows single house’s horrific history
The Guardian
··
-
Oddity review – deft Irish horror gets great value from ventriloquist’s dummy
The Guardian
··
-
Who We Love review – queer teen’s Dublin awakening is Euphoria with Guinness
The Guardian
··
-
Justin Baldoni to reportedly file counterclaim against Blake Lively
The Guardian
··
-
Rise in talk about killing in films raises health concerns, researchers say
The Guardian
··
-
The Guardian
··
-
Father of the Bride and Baby Boom director Charles Shyer dies aged 83
The Guardian
··
-
Diabel review – canine sidekick along for ride as dour war veteran biffs bad guys
The Guardian
··
-
‘Endlessly rewatchable’: why Diggstown AKA Midnight Sting is my feelgood movie
The Guardian
··
-
1970 review – puppet Soviets plot alongside real-life footage of landmark Polish protest
The Guardian
··
-
The Wolves Always Come at Night review – melancholy meditation on a lost way of life
The Guardian
··
-
The Order review – Jude Law tails white supremacists in brooding true crime drama
The Guardian
··
-
How to Make Millions Before Grandma Dies review – tear-jerking Oscar contender from Thailand
The Guardian
··
-
Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review – Jim Carrey doubles up in frenetically empty sequel
The Guardian
··
-
Nosferatu review – Lily-Rose Depp is the dark heart of Robert Eggers’s extraordinary vampire tale
The Guardian
··
-
A laugh a day to keep the winter blues away: the 31-day comedy diet for January
The Guardian
··
-
From climate denial to gothic movies to ‘treat culture’ … what to expect in 2025
The Guardian
··
-
Better Man review – Robbie Williams monkeys around in a raw and emotional biopic
The Guardian
··
-
Vinnie Jones: ‘I don’t like the hard man label’
The Guardian
··
-
The best films of 2024 … you may not have seen
The Guardian
··
-
Kieran Culkin on pranks, parenting and why his famous family doesn’t need therapy: ‘Us siblings, we’re already cooked’
The Guardian
··
-
Olivia Hussey, star of 1968 Romeo and Juliet film, dies aged 73
The Guardian
··
-
Sonic the Hedgehog 3 to The Traitors: a complete guide to the week’s entertainment in the UK
The Guardian
··
-
Nickel Boys star Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor: ‘If we see something wrong and don’t say anything, we’re participants’
The Guardian
··
-
‘I had to make the vampire as scary as possible’: Nosferatu’s Robert Eggers on how folklore fuelled his film
The Guardian
··
-
‘It’s full of things that didn’t happen – but it feels right!’ Inside the making of Bob Dylan film A Complete Unknown
The Guardian
··
-
Baby Driver actor Hudson Meek, 16, dies after fall from moving vehicle
The Guardian
··
-
‘What would happen if the camera was Buddhist?’ The outlier film-making of RaMell Ross
The Guardian
··
-
Maggie Smith remembered by David Hare
The Guardian
··