You shouldn’t judge a movie by its trailer. This weekend’s “Geostorm,” though, looks laughably bad.
Christopher Lawrence
Christopher Lawrence is the movie critic for the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
clawrence@reviewjournal.com … @life_onthecouch on Twitter. 702-380-4567
The film chronicles the story of the Prescott (Arizona) Fire Department’s Granite Mountain Hotshots and the historic 2013 Yarnell Hill Fire.
For a movie with “Mark Felt” in its title, writer-director Peter Landesman’s (“Concussion”) historical drama rarely allows viewers to get to know Watergate whistleblower Mark Felt.
The biopic, starring Chadwick Boseman as soon-to-be legal legend Thurgood Marshall, is the filmmaking equivalent of a collective exhale.
“Wonder Woman” has been one of the biggest and best surprises of the moviegoing year.
The show kicks off — unbelievably — its 28th season Sunday on ABC
The first rule of “Blade Runner 2049”? You don’t talk about “Blade Runner 2049.”
The actor returns to town, and his improv roots, this weekend.
The new Netflix film follows last month’s record-setting debut of “IT.”
Spend even five minutes on social media, and you’ll walk away convinced the world is nuttier than it’s ever been.
In one of the promos for the upcoming ninth season of “Curb Your Enthusiasm” (10 p.m. Sunday, HBO), Larry David is summoned back to television by having his sour puss reflected on the clouds, Batsignal-style.
Let’s get this out of the way right up front: This is, at best, a mediocre crop of new fall shows.
Among the many questions raised by “Kingsman: The Golden Circle” are: Did Kentucky manage to hurt director and co-writer Matthew Vaughn in some way as a child? And why does he think Kentucky’s stereotypes are identical to those of Texas?
Once “Friends” became a sensation in 1994, it was followed by more sitcoms about wisecracking single white New Yorkers than you could shake one of those free AOL CD-ROMs at.
If you’re HBO, where do you go once you’ve played the sex-and-dragons card?