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The four-part series, which will chronicle the team’s Super Bowl-winning glory years, is set to premiere on AMC and AMC+ in ...
“Noises Off,” running Sept. 25-Nov. 8, opens the company’s 2025-26 lineup at its Union Square venue on the second floor of ...
Chronicle film critic emeritus Mick LaSalle also answers questions about how much sex is necessary to a story and which time ...
“One to One: John & Yoko” combines the best aspects of Boomer nostalgia with generational overindulgence. The documentary’s access to loads of rare footage of the ex-Beatle and his artist wife at a ...
“The King of Kings” gives the Jesus story an animated treatment with some whimsical Dickensian touches. It’s nothing to write scripture about, but it should provide amusing and possibly enlightening ...
The Fair Trade USA founder’s book, “Every Purchase Matters,” explores how conscious consumer choices can create global change amid rising tariffs. Paul Rice is the author of “Every Purchase Matters: ...
Each episode of the new hit Netflix drama “Adolescence” was filmed in a single continuous shot. While shooting the British show, which premiered Thursday, March 13 and traces the emotional fallout ...
When a CIA desk clerk’s wife is killed, he takes matters into his own hands, and solid espionage entertainment ensues. Rami Malek stars as a CIA cryptographer who goes rogue in the field to avenge the ...
John Brougher, left, and Edris Cooper-Anifowoshe in Magic Theatre’s “The Boiling.” Photo: Jay Yamada/Magic Theatre The art form might be called drama, but gentleness is a perfectly valid approach ...
The country’s first openly transgender choreographer brings his acclaimed company back to San Francisco with a program celebrating LGBTQ personal histories. Sean Dorsey at Dance Mission Theater in San ...
One good thing about Eddie Izzard’s one-person “Hamlet” is that it suggests how great Izzard (who also goes by Suzy in some contexts) would be in pretty much anything that’s not a one-person “Hamlet.” ...
Michelle Williams is devastatingly real once this FX/Hulu show about a terminally ill woman’s fulfillment quest drops the juvenile humor. Michelle Williams, from left, and Jenny Slate play best ...
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