trending topics

 New Trailers 

The Cinema group

Entertainment News

Entertainment News

Oh. What. Fun. Review: Michelle Pfeiffer Shines in a Warm, Compassionate Holiday Tale About Invisible Labor and Unseen Love

Oh. What. Fun. Review: Michelle Pfeiffer Shines in a Warm, Compassionate Holiday Tale About Invisible Labor and Unseen Love

Michelle Pfeiffer shines in Oh. What. Fun., a heartfelt holiday dramedy celebrating the invisible labor of mothers. Warm, charming, and emotionally resonant, the film brings a fresh perspective to Christmas storytelling.

Read More
Marty Supreme Review: Chalamet and Safdie Deliver a Fever-Dream Opus of Mania, Mythmaking, and American Ambition — Timothée Chalamet’s Greatest Performance Yet

Marty Supreme Review: Chalamet and Safdie Deliver a Fever-Dream Opus of Mania, Mythmaking, and American Ambition — Timothée Chalamet’s Greatest Performance Yet

Timothée Chalamet delivers the strongest performance of his career in Josh Safdie’s Marty Supreme, a fever-dream epic of mania, ambition, and American mythmaking. An electrifying A24 drama filled with visionary filmmaking, explosive tension, and a career-defining turn from Chalamet — a major awards-season contender.

Read More
‘Hamnet’ Review: Jessie Buckley Shatters the Heart in Chloé Zhao’s Masterwork of Grie

‘Hamnet’ Review: Jessie Buckley Shatters the Heart in Chloé Zhao’s Masterwork of Grie

Jessie Buckley gives a career-defining performance in Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet,’ a devastating, beautifully crafted portrait of grief, memory, and love. A major awards contender and one of 2026’s most powerful films.

Read More
‘Wicked: For Good’ Review: A Sweeping, Shadowed Finale That Finds Its Power in the End

‘Wicked: For Good’ Review: A Sweeping, Shadowed Finale That Finds Its Power in the End

‘Wicked: For Good’ closes Jon M. Chu’s two-part musical with a moodier tone, patient pacing, and a finale that rewards the wait. Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande guide Oz toward an emotional, rousing conclusion that brings the Elphaba-Glinda story full circle.

Read More
‘Playdate’ Review: Alan Ritchson and Kevin James Keep This Ridiculous Prime Video Action-Comedy Watchable

‘Playdate’ Review: Alan Ritchson and Kevin James Keep This Ridiculous Prime Video Action-Comedy Watchable

Prime Video’s Playdate pairs Alan Ritchson and Kevin James for a fast, chaotic action-comedy that leans into big personalities and bigger set pieces. It’s not prestige filmmaking, but the leads keep it entertaining from start to finish. A fun, easy watch built on chemistry, charm and pure stream-at-home energy.

Read More
‘The Beast in Me’ Review: Netflix Returns to Prestige Thrillers With a Sharp, Slow-Burn Cat-and-Mouse Showcase for Claire Danes and Matthew Rhys

‘The Beast in Me’ Review: Netflix Returns to Prestige Thrillers With a Sharp, Slow-Burn Cat-and-Mouse Showcase for Claire Danes and Matthew Rhys

Netflix’s The Beast in Me is a gripping, slow-burn psychological thriller powered by outstanding performances from Claire Danes and Matthew Rhys. Tense, emotional, and character-driven, it recalls the prestige heyday of Homeland while carving out its own dark, addictive identity.

Read More
‘The Running Man’ Review: Glen Powell Powers Through Edgar Wright’s Electrifying, Big-Screen Rebirth of Stephen King’s Dystopian Classic

‘The Running Man’ Review: Glen Powell Powers Through Edgar Wright’s Electrifying, Big-Screen Rebirth of Stephen King’s Dystopian Classic

Edgar Wright’s The Running Man reimagines Stephen King’s dystopian classic for a new generation — with Glen Powell delivering a star-making performance in a blood-soaked, adrenaline-fueled action epic that reclaims the power of the theatrical experience.

Read More
‘Bugonia’ Review: Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons Battle Over Doomed Humanity in Yorgos Lanthimos’ Loopy Dark Comedy About Our Planet in Peril

‘Bugonia’ Review: Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons Battle Over Doomed Humanity in Yorgos Lanthimos’ Loopy Dark Comedy About Our Planet in Peril

Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia reimagines the Korean cult classic Save the Green Planet! as a darkly comic eco-satire about conspiracy, control, and extinction. Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons deliver electric performances in a film that’s both absurdly funny and deeply unsettling.

Read More
‘Death by Lightning’ Review: Michael Shannon and Matthew Macfadyen Illuminate a Forgotten Chapter of American Power

‘Death by Lightning’ Review: Michael Shannon and Matthew Macfadyen Illuminate a Forgotten Chapter of American Power

Politics, ego, and madness collide in Death by Lightning, a stunningly acted retelling of Garfield’s assassination that plays like a slow-motion tragedy for a country addicted to power. Macfadyen is the performance of the year, his Guiteau both pathetic and magnetic, while Shannon turns Garfield into a tragic monument of integrity. If history repeats itself, this one makes you wish it wouldn’t.

Read More
‘Ballad of a Small Player’ Review: Colin Farrell Gambles Big in Edward Berger’s Stylish but Soulless Noir

‘Ballad of a Small Player’ Review: Colin Farrell Gambles Big in Edward Berger’s Stylish but Soulless Noir

Edward Berger’s Ballad of a Small Player dazzles with visual style but struggles with soul. Colin Farrell delivers a haunting performance as a gambler chasing salvation in Macau’s neon purgatory, joined by Fala Chen and Tilda Swinton in a stylish yet hollow morality play.

Read More
‘The Last Frontier’ Review: Jason Clarke Anchors a Gritty, Slow-Burn Alaskan Thriller That Finds Humanity Beneath the Ice

‘The Last Frontier’ Review: Jason Clarke Anchors a Gritty, Slow-Burn Alaskan Thriller That Finds Humanity Beneath the Ice

Apple TV’s The Last Frontier turns a gripping premise — convicts loose in Alaska — into a haunting meditation on survival and morality. Jason Clarke leads a strong cast in a slow, patient thriller that finds beauty and conscience in the cold.

Read More
‘Nobody Wants This’ Season 2 Review: Kristen Bell and Adam Brody Keep the Faith (Mostly) in Netflix’s Interfaith Rom-Com

‘Nobody Wants This’ Season 2 Review: Kristen Bell and Adam Brody Keep the Faith (Mostly) in Netflix’s Interfaith Rom-Com

Netflix’s Nobody Wants This returns with less spark but more sincerity. Kristen Bell and Adam Brody remain charming in this funny, heartfelt look at love, faith, and commitment. A thoughtful, if uneven, follow-up that proves belief and chemistry are still worth watching.

Read More
A House of Dynamite’ Isn’t Exploitation — Kathryn Bigelow’s Nuclear Thriller Is a Mirror.

A House of Dynamite’ Isn’t Exploitation — Kathryn Bigelow’s Nuclear Thriller Is a Mirror.

Critics called it alarmist, but Kathryn Bigelow’s A House of Dynamite is a daring and necessary work of modern cinema. Far from exploitation, her nuclear thriller channels tension and truth into moral reflection. With Rebecca Ferguson and Jared Harris commanding the screen, Bigelow proves fear can be art — and that art can still provoke courage.

Read More
‘Is This Thing On?’ Review: Bradley Cooper Finds Humor and Humanity in the Quiet Cracks of a Marriage

‘Is This Thing On?’ Review: Bradley Cooper Finds Humor and Humanity in the Quiet Cracks of a Marriage

Bradley Cooper’s Is This Thing On? closes the New York Film Festival with warmth, humor, and humanity. Starring Will Arnett and Laura Dern, this tender, funny film explores love’s second act through stand-up, self-reflection, and the art of moving forward.

Read More
‘Marty Supreme’: First Reactions From NYFF63 Premiere Hail Timothée Chalamet’s “Career-Best” Turn in Josh Safdie’s Maximalist Sports Epic

‘Marty Supreme’: First Reactions From NYFF63 Premiere Hail Timothée Chalamet’s “Career-Best” Turn in Josh Safdie’s Maximalist Sports Epic

Timothée Chalamet delivers a “career-best” performance in Josh Safdie’s Marty Supreme, which premiered as a surprise at NYFF63. The $70M A24 film — directed and edited by Safdie, who completed the final cut at 2 a.m. the day of the screening — drew raves for its energy, style, and New York spirit ahead of its Dec. 25 release.

Read More
‘Anemone’ Review: Daniel Day-Lewis Returns in a Haunting Father-Son Drama About Guilt, Faith, and Inheritance

‘Anemone’ Review: Daniel Day-Lewis Returns in a Haunting Father-Son Drama About Guilt, Faith, and Inheritance

Daniel Day-Lewis makes a powerful return in Anemone, a haunting father-son collaboration with his son Ronan Day-Lewis. A visually stunning, emotionally bruising portrait of guilt, violence, and forgiveness that cements the Day-Lewis legacy across generations.

Read More
‘After the Hunt’ Review: Julia Roberts Leads Luca Guadagnino’s Polarizing Drama of Power, Ethics, and Over-Intellectualized Chaos

‘After the Hunt’ Review: Julia Roberts Leads Luca Guadagnino’s Polarizing Drama of Power, Ethics, and Over-Intellectualized Chaos

Julia Roberts delivers one of her most daring performances in Luca Guadagnino’s After the Hunt, a cerebral and provocative #MeToo-era thriller that opens the 63rd New York Film Festival. Beautifully crafted and intellectually charged, it’s as fascinating as it is divisive.

Read More

Reviews

New Videos

Interviews

THE CINEMA GROUP

YOUR PREMIER SOURCE FOR THE LATEST IN FILM AND ENTERTAINMENT NEWS 

FOLLOW US FOR MORE

Film Is Not Dead

Film Is Not Dead

A COMMUNITY for cinephiles, pop CULTURE Lovers & artist À Like.

The Cinema Group is a collective of filmmakers, creators, and passionate film enthusiasts — a home for those who seek escape, inspiration, and connection through the transformative power of cinema.

Founded in 2020 by Jonathan P. Moustakas in New York, The Cinema Group was created to build community and foster connection through a shared love of film.

What began as a grassroots passion project has grown into a trusted platform and creative studio — one that serves as a safe haven for cinephiles, storytellers, and lovers of art in all its forms.

Through The Group’s thoughtful coverage, creative & Strategic collaborations, as well as cultural conversation, we’re redefining what cinema means in modern Generation.

JOIN THE CINEMA GROUP

The Cinema Group delivers cinematic content daily Film Reviews and trending stories from the world of entertainment and cinema across all platforms.

Black and white photo of a movie theater entrance with people waiting in line, vintage car in the foreground, and a marquee with the words 'Happier Than Ever' and 'In The Group'.

We’re a Collective of Cinema lovers that strive to inspire the next GENERATION of filmmakers.

The Cinema Group aims to be a haven for film enthusiasts and a growing collaborative community.

Click the link below

to join OUR community

JOIN THE CINEMA GROUP

The Cinema Group

The Cinema Group

CREATIVE STUDIO

|

NEW YORK, NY

|

CREATIVE STUDIO | NEW YORK, NY |