The highs, lows and most bizarre moments from the 96th Oscars
By Ty Lolak | March 16, 2024Oscars night was filled with dazzling musical performances, heartbreaking upsets and intriguing celebrity appearances.
Oscars night was filled with dazzling musical performances, heartbreaking upsets and intriguing celebrity appearances.
2023 saw a number of cinematic achievements in both film, direction and performance, making for an exciting pool of nominees, if not victors.
The film, under all of its impressive craft and memorable acting performances, also has a riveting and thoughtful story.
With her clear comedic chops, Tomlinson deserves her financial and professional success, but she unnecessarily overemphasizes both in this special.
Indeed, lovers of the 2005 film will find nods to the Brangelina of it all throughout the new series, from blown up houses to secret stashes of spy supplies.
This spring, two Media Studies professors debuted innovative ways of bringing leisure content into academic discussion.
Viewers will witness an emotion-filled account of three demigods navigating the challenges of their unique world.
“Mean Girls” is a quirky and colorful reincarnation of its predecessors, but it loses freshness by blaring brand deals and attempting to appeal to a Gen-Z audience.
The Golden Globe Awards kicked off the Hollywood awards season Sunday night with the first major event since the SAG-AFTRA and WGA strikes.
In a self-conscious and shamelessly cinematic combination of black-and-white and color film, “Maestro” paints a portrait of the legendary composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein, played by Cooper himself.
Based on the 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray, Yorgos Lanthimos’ newest film “Poor Things” is a thoughtful exploration of freedom, autonomy and liberation.
In preparation for the record-breaking North American release, the original Japanese dialogue was dubbed into English by voice actors, including Robert Pattinson, Florence Pugh, Christian Bale and Gemma Chan.
Ahead of the movie musical’s theatrical release Dec. 15, cast members Timothée Chalamet and Keegan-Micheal Key sat down with The Cavalier Daily to talk about becoming their characters, and the fun had while working on the project.
For Class of 2022 alumna Karen Zipor, the answer is easy. Since graduating, Zipor has used her Drama and Computer Science degrees — alongside strong connections she has formed with University alumni — to carve her path in the entertainment industry out in Los Angeles.
Ultimately, “May December” is a film about moral ambiguity. “Insecure people are dangerous,” Gracie says to Elizabeth, but even more dangerous is the inability to distinguish past from present, innocence from guilt, right from wrong. According to Haynes, at least, it’s all just shades of gray.
Equal parts poignant and amusing, this film is a labor of love that illustrates Oglala Lakota reservation life with thoughtfulness, telling a greater story about the complexities of the human condition.
“The Holdovers” fully commits to a 1970s pastiche and successfully pulls it off.
Below is a selection of movies — ranging from family friendly to spine-chilling — pulled from the most highly acclaimed stop-motions horror films of all time.
In the theater, and in the crowds on screen, there were parents and children, middle school and college students, Swifties and non-Swifties and everything in between, all of whom were held, rapt, for the entirety of the three hours. So call it what you want, but certainly don’t call it boring.
This year’s picks include a number of films with star-studded casts and crews.