'Jurassic Park 4' Delayed We hope you weren't counting too heavily on Jurassic Park 4 making its projected summer 2014 release date, because it looks like Universal has gone back to the drawing board...at least temporarily. The news, as it so often does these days, leaked via Twitter, where Digital Asset Manager Todd Smoyer and Concept Artist Dean Sherriff shared JP4's delay with varying degrees of unhappiness and/or panic. More
Weekend Box Office Report: ‘Oblivion:’ One Release, One Top Spot The weekend was very kind to last week’s one and only new release, Oblivion. Otherwise, the charts have remained more or less static since last weekend. Oblivion did quite well in the box office, making over $38.1 million; while this is at the bottom end of its predicted range for its opening weekend gross, it’s still a respectable sum, and the film can probably expect similarly impressive numbers in later weeks. More
New in Theaters: ‘Oblivion’ As promising and, surprisingly, somewhat original as the film sounds, critics remain unimpressed (aren’t they always?)—Rotten Tomatoes currently rates it at 59%. While the film is visually stunning, and Cruise offers a respectable performance, some insist that there’s not quite enough substance to the script to tie the whole package together. More
Disney Confirms 'Star Wars: Episode VII' on Target for 2015 Disney has been pretty slow to release official information about its slate of upcoming Star Wars sequels, but nobody gets out of CinemaCon without making a few big announcements, and this one's sort of a doozy, albeit in classically circumspect Mouse House fashion: Episode VII is indeed coming to theaters in 2015, with a new Star Wars-related film to follow every summer. More
The stars of "Sing Sing," "Ghostlight," and "Saturday Night" share why they think some of the most celebrated films of the year have starred actors playing actors.
The legendary film critic, who appears this weekend at New York's Metrograph in conversation, tells IndieWire about his issues with 10-best lists and where his massive DVD collection ended up.
Allison Anders and Kurt Voss' comedy set in the music industry was a Sundance crowd-pleaser in 1999, but 26 years later, it's impossible to find on either DVD or streaming. That needs to change.