Their Excellent Adventure was an unexpectedly big hit, so its sequel is expectedly bigger: lavish visions of the future, heaven, hell, and points between. The premise is a Terminator-type mission: two "evil twin robots" (twins of Bill and Ted, not of each other) sent back from the future to murder …
An exaltation of stupidity, a trait the filmmakers would seem to know intimately. Two low-denominator high-school students -- heavy-tongued, heavy-eyelidded heavy-metal types -- get their hands on a time machine to round up some helpers for their pending History report: Lincoln, Socrates, Freud, Beethoven, Genghis Khan, Billy the Kid, Joan …
Chipper, charming, ascetic, probably gay, Cunningham at 82 is a terrific movie subject. For decades he has photographed people of chic or idiosyncratic fashion on New York streets and at parties, caring not (he says) about celebrities, only style. His work, much of it published in the Times, has helped …
Chronicle of a Billie Eilish concert tour.
Immersive 3D concert film capturing Billie Eilish's 2025 Manchester shows, merging high-energy performances with backstage moments, fan testimonials, and intimate,, sensory-focused behind-the-scenes glimpses into tour life. Co-directed by Eilish and James Cameron.
Extended cut version of a Grammy nominated concert film.
Prior to watching Billie Eilish: The World’s a Little Blurry, the singer meant little more to me than the girl with the Prestone antifreeze-tinged locks whose name frequently appeared on TMZ. The same way people now have the capability to shoot a movie on a phone, Eilish and her brother/producer/performer …
Prior to watching Billie Eilish: The World’s a Little Blurry, the singer meant little more to me than the girl with the Prestone antifreeze-tinged locks whose name frequently appeared on TMZ. The same way people now have the capability to shoot a movie on a phone, Eilish and her brother/producer/performer …
It took a lot to make me set aside my prejudice against grown men who wear bow ties and/or Sherlock Holmes deerstalkers, but Bill Nye is the real deal. Consider this less a biodoc, more of an attack on the real threat posed by human-caused climate change. Don’t expect directors …
Bill (Alex Winter) assures us that “Sometimes, things don’t make sense until the end of the story.” It might well be a good distance from the culminating moments of The Life and Death of Col. Blimp or Planet of the Apes, but the opportunity to see Bill reunite with his …
Any gangster film that can dredge up something so old as to appear almost new again -- namely, cement footwear for swimming -- has done enough to justify itself. A craftsmanly run-through of the most elementary and elemental material, this one (adapted from the E.L. Doctorow novel) homes in especially …
Fluffy and forgettable bit of uplift about an unlikely lad in Margaret Thatcher's England, who drops out of the local boxing club, drops in on the all-girl ballet class that convenes in the same gym, and proves himself (not to the untrained eye, which might concede his potential as a …