
From Paddington to Star Wars: What's new to streaming this week
Catch a new Star Wars adventure and the marmalade-loving bear we all need right now.
Catch a new Star Wars adventure and the marmalade-loving bear we all need right now.
Rupert Grint is reportedly worth over $87 million.
World's biggest cinema chain sparks debate for banning singing along during screenings.
Times: It’s hard to believe there's anything the 62-year-old Oscar winner can’t do.
Why was screenwriter Richard Curtis' charity 'mini-sequel' rejected by the A-lister?
The film is set to become the top Thanksgiving opening of all time.
It took the band a fortnight to conquer the US – Beatles ‘64 takes you along for the ride.
The Oscar nominee claims the director had 'changed' and become 'quite impatient' on set.
Set three years after the first film, Moana is now a leader and master navigator.
Grande and Erivo have double billing – but one was paid many times more.
The British actor's performance is a departure from his 'charming' reputation.
Catch HBO's latest crime drama, Martin Scorsese's new Beatles documentary and more.
Michel Mulipola discusses his animation debut with Disney’s Moana 2 and his role in shaping its story. Video / Te Ao
Nearly 20 years after its release, Law shared a surprising detail about the film.
Financial Times: Sales of music such as CDs and vinyl rose faster than streaming revenues.
New York Times: Sobbing in the movie theatre? You’re not alone.
REVIEW: The affection between the good and green witches of Oz has been magnified tenfold.
The endless global publicity tour seems to have broken the brains of everyone involved.
He was also added to the child sex offender register.
Telegraph: Thomasin McKenzie stars in a new Netflix film about Louise Joy Brown's story.
Times: The actress thought her politics would never harm her career.
NYT: Director on rejected sequel ideas and working with a “fractious” Denzel Washington.
Telegraph: Entering his 50s, Leonardo DiCaprio now faces an awkward middle-aged reality.
Karl Puschmann thanks the gods for the film's wild historical inaccuracies.
New York Times: Cher's new memoir explores her difficult childhood and fraught marriage.
The film, starring Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo, nearly looked very different.
'Give the gift of the Māori language.'
There’s plenty for historians to grit their teeth about.