Hollywood's new favorite star is now a fast-talking table tennis hot shot. He's already been Bob Dylan, traveled to desert of ...
On Dec. 28, Wagner, 95, posted to Instagram to honor the anniversary of his first wedding to Wood. Alongside a photo from the ...
The first gay-inclusive Christmas movies were admittedly a bit dreary and rarely centered on women. But modern-day filmmakers have created a slew of recent lesbian Christmas movies to reverse that ...
We’re here, we’re queer, and we’re… getting used to it. In 2025, LGBTQ Americans faced yet another surge of fierce attacks targeting their human rights and legal protections. Those same groups were ...
Rachel Shatto, Editor in Chief of PRIDE.com, is an SF Bay Area-based writer, podcaster, and former editor of Curve magazine, where she honed her passion for writing about social justice and sex (and ...
Hollywood has never been in a more precarious position than it has of late, following the shock news that Netflix is officially set to buy Warner Bros. But even if the future of moviedom as we know it ...
Anyone will tell you that these are tumultuous, borderline-apocalyptic times for the film industry. Box office is down. The threat of AI looms. Billionaires and tech giants are laying waste to what ...
Movies are the great escape. “Optimistic endings, passionate romances,” sings the incarcerated dreamer of “Kiss of the Spider Woman,” who looks to old Hollywood movies as an oasis of beauty and faith.
I’m not going to lie: 2025 was not a year that’s easy to put a rosy spin on, even in the introductory blurb to a list of the year’s best movies. This has been a 12-month period of daily pummeling by ...
For almost as long as there have been films, there have been Christmas movies to go with them. But it wasn’t until television came along that watching Christmas movies became a true holiday tradition.
Brad Pitt in "F1" (Apple), Tom Cruise in "Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning" (Paramount), Michelle Pfeiffer in "Oh. What. Fun." (Amazon MGM) Finally, our long international nightmare is over.
Our film critics watch a lot of movies in a year. By December, their viewing slates span international standouts, festival favorites, studio blockbusters, and plenty more in between. Below, Justin ...