Widen the Door Without Lowering the Bar
Audiences aren’t turning away from great entertainment — they’re seeking a deeper relationship with it. As more attention turns to creators, it’s time to reconsider…
Audiences aren’t turning away from great entertainment — they’re seeking a deeper relationship with it. As more attention turns to creators, it’s time to reconsider…
'The Bear' stars Jeremy Allen White and Ayo Edebiri break down the moment when Carmy drops a dish and why it represents "ego death."
Chile’s Pablo Larrain is set to kick off production on his next feature for Netflix, 'Once,' later this year.
'Tenet' assistant director Tõnis Pill talks about crafting a tale of boyhood during manosphere era, portraying disability on screen with 'Fränk.'
'It' and 'Annabelle' screenwriter Gary Dauberman will write 'Five Nights at Freddy's 3.'
Audiences aren’t turning away from great entertainment — they’re seeking a deeper relationship with it.…
Filosophia CEO Tetsu Fujimura backed his keynote with data on surging anime and manga markets and a packed Hollywood pipeline.
Topics take in faith cinema, the film-music interface and how to create for distracted minds.
YouTube EMEA VP Pedro Pina will deliver the flagship address at this year's Edinburgh TV Festival.
Fantasia’s Frontières and the Tokyo Film Festival Content Market have partnered on a gap-financing program for international genre film.
Thailand's DITP head on 'White Lotus' economics, Thai BL content, and a Palme d'Or legacy at Cannes.
The creative team behind 'Big Mouth' turns their attention to the animal kingdom with a raunchy take on looking for love.
Thai filmmaker Sompot Chidgasornpongse discusses his debut feature '9 Temples to Heaven,' world premiering at Cannes Directors' Fortnight.
Youku hit 'My Dearest Stranger' sells to Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia and Macao and closes a worldwide airline rights deal.
Hamaguchi Ryusuke discusses his Cannes competition entry 'All of a Sudden,' a French-Japanese co-production starring Virginie Efira and Okamoto Tao.
'The Late Show With Stephen Colbert' ended with Paul McCartney turning out the lights off at the Ed Sullivan Theater, following a 'Hello Goodbye' singalong.