Natalie Portman’s Surprising Vox Lux Challenge: Changing Diapers
The actress, who plays a pop star in her latest film, reveals the one part of the role she couldn’t leave behind on set.
The actress, who plays a pop star in her latest film, reveals the one part of the role she couldn’t leave behind on set.
Two new behind-the-scenes videos reveal the inner workings of the movie’s wisecracking L3-37.
“She spoke up for me. She took a stance for me,” writes Paige Carnes, the 24-year-old once known as Jane Doe.
In one of the most horrific tweets of his presidency, Trump said “3,000 people did not die” from Hurricane Maria, and accused Democrats of lying about the death count.
Macdonald has spent the week dropping one gaffe after another; now he’s apologizing for his last apology.
With Anonymous still on the loose and the “administrative state” unchecked, the last person Trump trusts is Stephen Miller.
Even if her stylist has specifically banned it.
The Game of Thrones star on playing a closeted actor in The Death and Life of John F. Donovan, Xavier Dolan’s first English-language film.
With Mueller open to a deal and Trump hinting at a pardon, Manafort may be in the perfect position to play the special counsel against the president.
The president has priorities!
The actor takes Vanity Fair back through his style journey.
Happy Throwback Thursday.
We predict big nights for The Handmaid’s Tale, Barry, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, and The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story.
Melissa Thompson, who has accused Weinstein of raping her, shared a video of a meeting she had with him on the day of the alleged attack.
Welcome to the jungle of New York Fashion Week’s last night.
Despite his “RED WAVE” bravado, a grim fatalism may finally be sinking in for the president, whose personality is not exactly conducive to operating under siege.
A Peter Farrelly movie about a black pianist (Mahershala Ali) and his white driver (Viggo Mortensen) in the Jim Crow South pleased crowds at the Toronto International Film Festival.
That’s one way to shape a redemption arc.
The Japanese contemporary artist identifies with Evel Knievel, despises fraud, and remembers the swims of his youth fondly.
With its campy approach and delightfully absurd aesthetic, this premiere is a satisfying return to form. Let’s hope the rest of the season doesn’t muck it all up.
Showrunners Dustin Thomason and Sam Shaw take us behind the scenes.
Debby Ryan seemed to allude to the renewal of the controversial series this morning with this cryptic Tweet: “If you didn’t like that, you’re gonna hate this.”
Round two, let’s go.
The wife of the 81-year-old says Judge Steven T. O’Neill had a bias he did not disclose.
The JPMorgan C.E.O. wants it known that he’s “smarter,” “tougher,” and from a “poorer” part of Queens.