Nicole Kidman
A high-powered CEO puts her career and family on the line when she begins a torrid affair with a much younger intern, in Babygirl.
A surprising romance kicks off comic consequences for a young woman, her mother and her movie star boss in A Family Affair.
Both beautiful and brutal, Robert Eggers’ The Northman is a saga worth seeing.
To support a high school girl who wants to bring her girlfriend to the prom a group of self-obsessed theater stars go to a small conservative Indiana town.
While beautiful to look at, The Undoing struggles to say something compelling as it’s more interested in amplifying the melodrama.
The Goldfinch is not a secret masterpiece, but it is good, beautiful even, and is worthy of revisiting and re-evaluation.
The events portrayed in Bombshell may have captured the world’s attention, but this film delivers too soft a punch to make the same impact.
In Bombshell, a group of women decide to take on Fox News head Roger Ailes and the toxic atmosphere he presided over the network.
John Crowley’s adaptation of The Goldfinch lets down its source material and is, above it all, limp Oscar-bait.
Big Little Lies, like thousands of great TV shows and movies before it, has fallen victim to sequel fatigue.
With the revival of witchcraft in pop culture, now seems like the right time to look back on Practical Magic starring Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman.
In The Goldfinch, a boy in New York is taken in by a wealthy Upper East Side family after his mother is killed in a bombing at the MoMA.
The Upside is occasionally funny and charming, but mostly wastes the talent of those involved, becoming a lackluster remake of the French film.
Kidman and Kusama work impeccably together in Destroyer to create an anti-heroine who can shoulder the weight of a familiar genre while rarely giving in to easy tropes.