Movies take us back to the fatalistic future
Why are we so preoccupied with a doomed future in movies? Take “The Hunger Games,†for example (which opened Friday).
Why are we so preoccupied with a doomed future in movies? Take “The Hunger Games,†for example (which opened Friday).
Opening Friday The Deep Blue Sea The Salt of Life House of Pleasures The Hunter Intruders The Island President Mirror Mirror Wrath of the Titans
The Blu-ray debut of “That ’70s Show” and follow-up seasons on a variety of other TV programs highlight these new home-video…
21 Jump Street: Based on the 1980s TV series, this movie takes the name and the part where young cops infiltrate high schools, and then mocks pretty much everything else, with plenty of success. Channing Tatum holds his…
Ticket sales for movies shown around the globe rose 3 percent in 2011 to $32.6 billion, thanks largely to growth in booming markets like China. U.S. and Canadian sales fell.
Here are the ten movies that have lost the most money so far, but watch out guys, John Carter is catching up fast
LOS ANGELES, March 21 (TheWrap.com) – “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo” DVD release has created the sort of mystery that even Lisbeth Salander might have trouble solving.
Feature: “Amor en Transito” (2010), “Battle Royale” (2000), “Carnage” (2011), “Gainsbourg” (2012), “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo” (2011), “The Hills Have Eyes: Part Two” (1985), “In the Garden of Sounds” (2009), “…
Yahoo’s deal with Fandango is another example of the one-time search giant’s shift in focus toward digital media.
The dramatic improvement in resolution in the screen of the new iPad doesn’t translate to significantly better-looking videos from iTunes, Netflix, or YouTube. Originally posted at iPad Atlas