Even the greats like Kubrick and Tarantino can admit when they’ve missed.
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Even the greats like Kubrick and Tarantino can admit when they’ve missed.
After over a year of a pandemic, the world could use a laugh. Luckily, that laughter is just a few clicks away on a streaming service of your choice. And this bizarre, in-progress century has already produced any number of great comedies that you can fire up any time you need a serotonin burst. Here are 45 made since 2000 that never fail to leave our sides splitting.
Unbearable tension arrives in some surprising places in this masterful display of subverted expectations.
From "Jaws" to "The Lighthouse," these cast and crew members went to hell and back to make their feature films.
Wes Anderson has never made a bad movie, but that only makes it more fun to argue about which of them is his best (hint: not "Rushmore").
From Jonny Greenwood's "Phantom Thread" score to Jonny Greenwood's "You Were Never Really Here" score, here's the best movie music of the 2010s.
Their films were on every Top 10, but what's on their lists? Guillermo del Toro, Lynne Ramsay, Edgar Wright, and more reflect on the best of 2018.
Director Julius Avery delivers a fast-paced genre hybrid with deeper questions than one might expect.
He also calls it "more poignant" than the original series.
“Better Call Saul” is a show that doesn’t lack for dramatic confrontations. But the reason those scenes are so memorable is that on balance, the AMC drama is a show driven by silence. In fact, the quiet reserve of so many of its characters has become a trademark of the series that Rhea Seehorn couldn’t help but laugh when asked what would happen if the show’s most stalwart characters came together. Seehorn is more than capable of exploding with rage, as viewers saw in “Breathe,” the second episode of Season 4. But typically, tough and smart lawyer Kim (Seehorn) is more reserved than normal folks, perhaps only matched for silence by reluctant drug dealer Nacho (Michael Mando). On set earlier this year, IndieWire simply asked, “what if Nacho and Kim had a scene together?” But Seehorn found the idea amusing. “If you stick Jonathan Banks in there, it’ll just be three people staring at each other, right? For an entire season. Just a staring contest. That’d be great.”