TV/Streaming
Home Entertainment Guide: May 2022
A guide to the latest on Blu-ray, DVD, and streaming services, including The Batman, Licorice Pizza, and Criterion editions of Double Indemnity and Chan is Missing.
A guide to the latest on Blu-ray, DVD, and streaming services, including The Batman, Licorice Pizza, and Criterion editions of Double Indemnity and Chan is Missing.
Many critics wrote off Haddish’s work in The Card Counter as a tonal mismatch for the otherwise unrelenting bleakness of the story, but that stance misses the point.
An interview with Rebecca Hall, director of Passing, in theaters today.
A guide to the latest and greatest on Blu-ray, including 4K editions of Speed, Donnie Darko, and The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.
The first floor in a series of essays about the significance of the month of April in the author's life.
The pioneering character actor always brought something extra to every project.
The latest on streaming and Blu-ray includes Bacurau, The Wild Goose Lake, and a Criterion edition of Marriage Story.
The staff offers some shows and movies to fill the time while we're all stuck at home.
An in-depth preview on the classic noir films that will be playing at Chicago's Music Box Theater from Sept. 6-12.
A posthumous tribute to two male directors who encouraged audience identification with women onscreen and made opportunities for female film artists.
Chaz Ebert and the RogerEbert.com group of writers wishes you Happy Holidays!
The latest on streaming and Blu-ray, including Support the Girls, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, Galveston, and The Magnificent Ambersons.
Difficult is a gendered term fueled by the Hollywood machine and maintained by the belief that actresses aren’t responsible for the achievement of their films.
Jessica Ritchey answers the Movie Love Questionnaire.
An appreciation of Richard Schickel, Time magazine film critic and prolific film director and book author.
Molly Haskell speaks with Matt Zoller Seitz about "From Reverence to Rape," "Love and Other Infectious Diseases," "Steven Spielberg: A Life in Films" and more.
An in-depth preview of the films, including rarities and restorations, playing in the Noir City: Chicago 8 program at the Music Box Theatre.
Why Viggo Mortensen is off the grid; How Netflix became Hollywood's frenemy; Ted Kotcheff on "First Blood"; Insomnia and philosophy; Bruce Dern at 80.
How the female co-stars of Arnold Schwarzenegger's hit films of the '80s helped change the genre.
The movie questionnaire and 2015 reviews of RogerEbert.com film critic Odie Henderson.