Maybe it was just too soon. Maybe after coming back so strongly with last year's bracing morality thriller Match Point, Woody Allen should have taken a year or so off.
In the desert of big-budget Hollywood flicks that feature flying superheroes, Crazy Stone is an oasis.
Substance places a distant second to style in the big-screen version of "Miami Vice," which sees respected filmmaker Michael Mann returning to the scene of the crime series that so effectively defined a decade.
Size does matter: "Little Man" is big on gross-out humor and slapsticky sight gags that appeal to the lowest common denominator, but small on genuinely clever laughs.
The "Pirates" sequel, "Dead Man's Chest," is precisely the disaster they were expecting from the first movie.
Mission: Impossible III will finally swing into Chinese theaters on Tuesday, nearly three months after it premiered on the bootleg market.
A famous designer throws a fit and hurls a pair of scissors at his assistant.
Finally this summer, the hype is justified. Superman Returns is everything you'd want it to be.
As legendary Vogue editor Diana Vreeland used to say in the era before daunting editor Anna Wintour.
Many moviegoers, including OSU students, have been anticipating Adam Sandler's new film, "Click."
The trailer and the ads indicate that it is a romantic comedy. But it is, in fact, neither romantic nor a comedy; it's more like an episode of Dr. Phil.
Rumor has it that John Cusack was offered the Keanu Reeves part in The Lake House and turned it down. Wise man, that Cusack.