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The Two Killings of Sam Cooke depicts Sam Cooke as he was: a pioneering musician, Civil Rights figure, and beacon of celebrity activism who was taken too soon.
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Princess Mononoke is one of the many animated masterpieces of
Studio Ghibli and Hayao Miyazaki that saw their US streaming debut with
the launch of HBO Max—and it also happens
...
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She's Gotta Have It shows three men as they attempt to understand who "she" is—and fail to give her the "it" she needs.
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Babette's Feast depicts the inextricable joys of both serving and being served.
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Tampopo serves up hedonism, virtue, and endless food porn (both literal and figurative).
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Rita Hayworth sparkles as the title role in Cover Girl.
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Adaptation adapts Susan Orleans' book The Orchid Thief, along with the book's writing, ramifications, and the creation of the screenplay itself.
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Welcome to Me is a chaotic show within a bonkers movie.
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The Souvenir forces you to share in the naivety and heartbreak of young love.
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Old flames combust under pressure in this Spanish-language thriller.
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The Hundred-Foot Journey will warm your heart if you let it.
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I always knew Flo from those Progressive Insurance commercials would nail a dramatic role.
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"Nancy Jo, this is Alexis Neiers calling."
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Daniel Dae Kim, Idris Elba, and Kristofer Hivju are the newest additions to the growing list of celebrities who have coronavirus.
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Somehow, Being John Malkovich makes perfect sense.
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Interstellar isn't trying to portray an authentic astronaut experience. And that's why I love it.
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Julie & Julia depicts two women who write their way into the culinary archive—despite the occasional burnt roast and fallen soufflé.
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Searching for Sugar Man tells the story of a musical genius whose success got lost somewhere between South Africa and Detroit.
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Paris Is Burning and its subjects have shaped our culture way beyond inspiring RuPaul's Drag Race.
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Atlantics tells a love story that's both ethereal and grounded.