The Girl with the Fork 2024 - Movies (Jan 29th)
Black Girls 2024 - Movies (Jan 29th)
Freelance 2024 - Movies (Jan 29th)
Flight Risk 2025 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Dark Night of the Soul 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Juror #2 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
The Fish Thief A Great Lakes Mystery 2025 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Wicked 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
In Between Stars and Scars Masters of Cinema 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Loch Ness Monster Captured 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Echoes Of A Hermit Solitude Resilience and the Power Of Writing 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
The Pushover 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
A Real Pain 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
The Tattooist’s Son Journey to Auschwitz 2025 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Tom Green I Got a Mule 2025 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Monster on a Plane 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
The Fire Inside 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Den of Thieves 2 Pantera 2025 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Babygirl 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Moana 2 2024 - Movies (Jan 27th)
Overkill 2024 - Movies (Jan 27th)
The Five - (Jan 30th)
Special Report with Bret Baier - (Jan 30th)
Outnumbered - (Jan 30th)
The Challenge- All Stars - (Jan 30th)
All Elite Wrestling- Dynamite - (Jan 30th)
The Thundermans- Undercover - (Jan 30th)
Expedition Bigfoot - (Jan 30th)
Dark Side of the Cage - (Jan 30th)
NOVA - (Jan 30th)
School Spirits - (Jan 30th)
The Last Word with Lawrence ODonnell - (Jan 30th)
The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City - (Jan 30th)
Chicago Med - (Jan 30th)
Chicago Fire - (Jan 30th)
The Rachel Maddow Show - (Jan 30th)
Guys Grocery Games - (Jan 30th)
Someday at a Place in the Sun - (Jan 30th)
Kirstie And Phils Love It Or List It - (Jan 30th)
The One Show - (Jan 30th)
The ReidOut with Joy Reid - (Jan 30th)
A screenwriter gets conned out of selling a script to a Hollywood producer by his brother, who pitches his own idea for a movie. This video recording of the 1982 Steppenwolf Theatre Company production was later broadcast by PBS.
People spoil things; there are so many of them and the last thing one wants is them traipsing through one’s house. But with the park a jungle and a bath on the billiard table, what is one to do? Dorothy wonders if an attic sale could be a solution.
Academy Award nominee and Tony Award-winner John Lithgow (Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Shrek, 3rd Rock from the Sun) takes the title role in Arthur Wing Pinero’s uproarious Victorian farce, directed by Olivier Award-winner Timothy Sheader (Crazy for You and Into the Woods, Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre, London). In a similar vein to the National Theatre’s smash-hit classic comedies, She Stoops to Conquer and London Assurance, The Magistrate is sure to have audiences doubled up with laughter. When amiable magistrate Posket (John Lithgow) marries Agatha (Olivier Award-winner Nancy Carroll, After the Dance), little does he realise she’s dropped five years from her age – and her son’s. When her deception looks set to be revealed, it sparks a series of hilarious indignities and outrageous mishaps.
Elyot Chase and Amanda Prynne are glamorous, rich, reckless…and divorced. Five years later, their love for one another is unexpectedly rekindled when they take adjoining suites of a French hotel while honeymooning with their new spouses. This chance encounter instantly reignites their passion, and they fling themselves headlong into a whirlwind of love and lust once more, without a thought for partners present or turbulences past. This Chichester Festival Theatre production of Noël Coward’s Privates Lives was filmed live at London's Gielgud Theatre.
National Theatre Live’s 2010 broadcast of Alan Bennett’s acclaimed play The Habit of Art, with Richard Griffiths, Alex Jennings and Frances de la Tour, returns to cinemas as part of the National Theatre's 50th anniversary celebrations. Benjamin Britten, sailing uncomfortably close to the wind with his new opera, Death in Venice, seeks advice from his former collaborator and friend, W H Auden. During this imagined meeting, their first for twenty-five years, they are observed and interrupted by, amongst others, their future biographer and a young man from the local bus station. Alan Bennett’s play is as much about the theatre as it is about poetry or music. It looks at the unsettling desires of two difficult men, and at the ethics of biography. It reflects on growing old, on creativity and inspiration, and on persisting when all passion’s spent: ultimately, on the habit of art.
Created from five years of interviews with 12 young people from across the UK, Our Generation is a captivating portrait of their journey into adulthood. Often too extraordinary to be fiction, this funny and moving play is for anyone who is – or has ever been – a teenager. Writer Alecky Blythe (London Road) brings her new verbatim play that tells the stories of a generation. Daniel Evans makes this directorial debut at the National Theatre. A production from National Theatre and Chichester Festival Theatre.
Alan Ayckbourn's riotous exposure of entrepreneurial greed returns to the National Theatre, where it premiered in 1987, winning the Evening Standard Theatre Award for Best Play.
Set in modern upper-crust Manhattan, an exploration of love and commitment as seen through the eyes of a charming perpetual bachelor questioning his single state and his enthusiastically married, slightly envious friends.
Teens! Bikes! Feathered Hair! Love and revenge! Leotards and acid-washed denim! It’s all here in the legendary Eighties BMX-racing action-drama-romance RAD! Join Mike, Bill and Kevin as they spin, flip and slow-bike-dance their way into your hearts, LIVE in theaters nationwide on August 17th! Don’t miss it, if you want to be RAD!