At the end of its second season, “Hacks” seemed to have written itself into a corner. On the heels of a hit special, veteran stand-up Deborah Vance (Jean Smart) fired Ava Daniels (Hannah Einbinder), the young writer whose perspective…
Trib Total Media TV writer Rob Owen answers reader questions every Wednesday at TribLive.com in a column that also appears in the Sunday Tribune-Review.
De Fallout 4 Next Gen-update is hier, en profiteert van de hype rondom de Fallout TV-show. De Fallout 4 Next Gen-update maakt alleen niet veel indruk. De update is gratis voor alle spelers en de PS5, Xbox Series X|S krijgen nu voor het…
Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt bring off-the-scale chemistry to this wildly entertaining thriller, a delicious blend of action comedy and screwball romance. It’s nominally based on a 1980s TV show about a stuntman-slash-bounty hunter, but…
Harold Halibut has the vibes of a game that should be 4-6 hours long and is, inexplicably, 10-12. It's inexplicable not only because it's a slow game low on interaction - the game is really just a plot delivery mechanism; a TV show you can…
In FX’s gripping new miniseries “The Veil,” right versus wrong isn’t a straightforward calculation, and truth is more confounding than it seems. The action series follows cunning MI6 agent Imogen Salter (a captivating Elisabeth Moss),…
Before the arrival of the Sonic the Hedgehog 3 movie this December, Paramount+ is streaming a special six-part series starring Knuckles the Echidna, voiced once again by Idris Elba. He's also joined by Wade Whipple (Adam Pally) and…
Don’t expect jump scares or the blood-flowing final acts of many A24 titles in the genre. Jane Schoenbrun is much more interested in placing you in the shoes of a feeling.
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Always read the small print. Everybody knows it and nobody ever does - when you're young, you can't be bothered, and when you're old, you can't find your reading glasses.
As this documentary smugly rehashes the transphobia that made Miriam Rivera’s life hell – claiming it would never happen today – it becomes just as tawdry. Has TV learned nothing in the past 20 years?