Poster designer Dustin Stanton has a history with Paul Thomas Anderson.
Ruby Sparks succeeds as a satirical fantasy about writerly self-involvement, but it’s worth celebrating as a testament to self-made greatness.
Men in masks have been darting across the movie screen since the days of silents and serials.
Are the demons that fed Tarnation’s making still present? Is it still, as Renee recites in the film’s closing moments, a beautiful world?
The new poster for Man of Steel is an exercise in tedium.
Sometimes, a ruse is so convincing that everyone is fooled, swept up by the yank of the proverbial rug.
A swirling storm is the proper framing device for Oz: The Great and Powerful’s first poster, which heralds its film by tossing trademark elements into a kind of artful rinse cycle.
The film nails the concept that, in worlds like this, the clothes don’t make the man.
From a child murderer to a furry monster to two more Stone creations, they comprise a choice selection of scoundrels.
Two of the year’s most striking posters are made up of little more than mysterious ingenues and coolly apt text.
Katy Perry: Part of Me only succeeds in illuminating Perry’s good nature.
That the The Magic of Belle Isle can conjure any true feeling at all is some kind of wonder.
Next time you snuggle up with your childhood friend, remember these teddy bear stars, who strive to prove there’s more to them than mere fluff.
How to sell a Keira Knightley period romance and still distinguish it from every other Keira Knightley period romance?
From Blade to Buffy, we’ve always needed fearless soldiers to battle creatures of the night.
There’s something highly appropriate about sitting before an all-star dais at the press conference for To Rome with Love.
Maya Entertainment wants YOU to see It’s a Disaster, a new comedy releasing soon from the indie distributor.
These cinematic sisters leave a mark as strong as a thicker-than-water bond.
Is Fernando Meirelles out of touch, or is he a savvy resurrectionist with fresh tricks up his sleeve?
The conversation unfailingly circled back to politics, and the little matter of Barack Obama coming out in support of gay marriage.