Irish rap outfit Kneecap on the riotous relevance of their new biopic
"KNEECAP" is the first Irish-language film to debut at Sundance and is also Ireland’s submission to the Academy Awards for Best International Feature Film.
More Film & TV
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NBC and Peacock to air 2024 Paris Olympics amid subscriber losses and price hike
Eric Deggans, NPR's first full-time TV critic, discussed NBC's coverage of the 2024 Summer Olympic Games and how it could impact their streaming service Peacock. -
Denée Benton on centering Black women in HBO's 'The Gilded Age'
The actress seems to have a cosmic connection to the 1800s. -
'House of the Dragon' season premiere: I told you the rats would be a whole thing
In the season premiere of House of the Dragon, Aegon II and Aemond are eager for war, and HBO's sound crew takes a big swing. -
Comic Hannah Einbinder on 'Hacks,' cheerleading and laughs as a love language
Einbinder says her experience on the competitive cheer team in middle school taught her extreme discipline and focus — which she then put toward comedy. Her new Max special is Everything Must Go. -
Movies by and about trans people to watch this Pride month
“The good news is that we’re moving away from sheer survival and also embracing the reality of the joy of finally being yourself,” film critic and writer Sarah G. Vincent said. -
As a fake 'Hit Man,' Glen Powell shows off his real star power
Glen Powell co-wrote Netflix's Hit Man alongside Richard Linklater, of the Before trilogy. The story is based on a Texas Monthly profile of a real undercover cop. -
Lidia Bastianich to be honored with Daytime Emmy Lifetime Achievement Award
The Italian cooking show host will be honored for 25 years of PBS programming. -
How 'Baby Reindeer' reflects (and fails to show) realities of stalking, according to a criminology professor
What is responsible to be sharing in a TV show? -
'Evil Does Not Exist' — or does it? — in this mysterious Japanese eco-drama
The residents of a bucolic woodland community face off against a developer with big plans for the land in a film that will leave you rapt — and profoundly unnerved. -
Jane Schoenbrun talks nostalgia, horror and trans identity in 'I Saw the TV Glow'
In the new film “I Saw the TV Glow”, two teenagers bond over their shared love of “The Pink Opaque,” a television show reminiscent of the teen drama “Buffy the Vampire Slayer.”