Two sets of identical twins are accidentally separated at birth. Several years later, when they are coincidentally in the same town, there is a lot of confusion and misunderstanding when people mistake them for each other. Directed by Rohit Shetty. With Deepika Padukone, Pooja Hegde, Jacqueline Fernandez, Ranveer Singh.
Competition for Twilight, assimilated vampires who protect the status quo by reducing their blood intake to moderate sips, precisely the cultural subgroup to embrace the misfit teen. (There are also bad, gluttonous vampires known as Vampaneze: “Vampires suck. Vampaneze rule.”) Competition, sure, but weak competition, self-consciously jokey, storybooky, winky. With …
Bill Norton's elegy on the L.A. counterculture seems to be in the right place at the right time, but lets the opportunity slip right between its legs. Some sidelong glances at the business of dope sales; some intense star-gazing at the twitches of Gene Hackman and the slouches of Kris …
Travel to cities—from Amsterdam to Los Angeles to Singapore and more, where profound change is already happening and meet the engineers and visionaries whose human ingenuity is forging a brighter, more sustainable future for us all. Narrated by John Krasinski.
Travel to cities—from Amsterdam to Los Angeles to Singapore and more, where profound change is already happening and meet the engineers and visionaries whose human ingenuity is forging a brighter, more sustainable future for us all. Narrated by John Krasinski.
Grammy®-award winning Renée Fleming has graced the World's biggest stages and now she’s debuting on the World’s largest movie screens! Experience Cities That Sing: Paris.
A real-life international espionage thriller centered around the eight days that filmmaker Laura Poitras, journalists Glenn Greenwald and Ewen MacAskill, and NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden spent in a Hong Kong hotel room while the NSA domestic surveillance story broke. It provides a rare experience: as Poitras has put it, “the …
A WWII vet dreams of becoming a star but instead turns to crime, in Nathan Morlando's Canadian thriller. With Scott Speedman, Kelly Reilly, William Mapother, Brian Cox.
The perennial winner, at a trot, of all Best Movie Ever polls; it was hardly that awesome when it first appeared, but Time has been a favorable ally to this movie, which is, for one thing, a most convenient and crammed storehouse of cinematic tricks already executed or only dreamed …
Thanks to Citizens United, when money talks, it's a form of protected speech. Or something. Corporations are people, too!
True-crime drama, about a New York cop with a father and son on the opposite side of the law, wears its heart on its sleeve and squeezes it like a sponge. Scottish-born director Michael Caton-Jones (best films: Rob Roy, Memphis Belle, old-fashioned stuff) doesn't let things get too messy. Excellent …