A review of the new Netflix series starring Sandra Oh, Jay Duplass, Bob Balaban, and Holland Taylor.
Who and what you should nominate for Emmys this year.
A fictional crime-drama series that not only understands our dark fascinations but also offers power fantasies typically denied women.
Sarah Knight Adamson reports from Santa Monica, CA on the winners and speeches at last weekend's Critics' Choice Awards.
A report from the Golden Globes, where Green Book and Bohemian Rhapsody were the night's big winners.
The best in television for the year.
A report from this morning's Golden Globes nominations announcement, and a full list of the nominees.
What our TV critic would nominate for Emmys for the 2017-18 season.
On four powerful films from TIFF, including works starring Anne Hathaway, Anne Heche, Sally Hawkins, and Gemma Arterton.
A dispatch on three films from the Toronto Film Festival, including the latest from Asghar Farhadi.
A gallery of photos, videos and links illustrating Chaz's journey relating to Roger's legacy in the two years since his death.
Toronto International Film Festival to be honored with a Canadian Screen Award on February 19th.
A photo gallery offering snapshots from The Ebert Dinner at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival.
A TIFF strike is narrowly avoided; Russell Simmons' highly offensive "Harriet Tubman sex tape"; Christina Yang as a groundbreaking TV character; novelist Francine Prose is no fan of "Blue Jasmine"; why audiences rate films so much higher than critics do.
Marie writes: Not everything is what is seems...(Click images to enlarge.)
David Fincher's "The Social Network"is emerging as the consensus choice as best film of 2010. Most of the critics' groups have sanctified it, and after its initial impact it has only grown it stature. I think it is an early observer of a trend in our society, where we have learned new ways of thinking of ourselves: As members of a demographic group, as part of a database, as figures in...a social network.
Based on his show-stopping speech at Saturday night's Independent Spirit Awards, if Mickey Rourke wins an Oscar on Sunday night the Oscarcast is going to be a lollapalooza. As his comeback film "The Wrestler" won for best film, male actor and cinematography, Rourke brought the show to a halt and the audience to its feet with an acceptance speech that was classic Mickey. The Indie Spirits are telecast live and unbleeped, which added considerably to the speech's charm.