500 years ago, William Shakespeare wrote, "All the world is a stage, and all the men and women are merely players." 100 years ago, Madame Curie exhorted us to not let fear keep us from understanding.
Michelle Yeoh is fun to watch in "Star Trek's" first TV movie, but the series-turned-film is a tonal mish-mash that feels stranded on the verge of something that will never come.
The line between comedy and tragedy is razor-thin, and the cast of “Anora” blurs it constantly, tapping into a wild and verbose energy that keeps the story moving like a freight train.
Here & Queer is a Canadian Screen Award-winning talk series hosted by Peter Knegt that celebrates and amplifies the work of LGBTQ artists through unfiltered conversations. At the beginning of ...
There's a saying that "comedy is tragedy plus time," but this study shows that it can't be to little or too much time. Thirty-six days, it seems, should do the trick.
Kaitlin Olson stars in High Potential as Morgan, a single mother with an exceptional mind who helps figure out an unsolvable crime when she rearranges some evidence during her shift as a cleaner at ...