!['Like dynamite going off': Sub occupants dead after implosion](/pf/resources/images/placeholders/placeholder_l.png?d=792)
'Like dynamite going off': Sub occupants dead after implosion
The five men died in milliseconds.
The five men died in milliseconds.
New York Times: New series reunites feel-good British film’s characters 25 years later.
Telegraph: We could forgive the bad CGI and neutered songs. But the dig at Princess Kate?
The most defining scene in his career wasn’t working until he tried something unusual.
The movie that won best picture at the Oscars raises questions over the nature of taste.
The comedian breaks his silence about being slapped by Will Smith and comes out swinging.
The backers of Everywhere Everything All at Once have turned viral hits into awards bait.
Cocaine Bear is the talk of the internet but not because it's a good movie.
The classic works will feature a disclaimer following a review by sensitivity readers.
In Shrinking, Jason Segel and Harrison Ford light up the small screen.
A quick look at the best new movies and shows coming to your screens this week.
Married reviewers Greg Bruce and Zanna Gillespie review the multiple-award-winning Tar.
Critics and Oscar voters love The Fabelmans, but the public has stayed away.
A rundown on the most popular things Kiwis are listening to and watching this week.
This horrifying look into the murderous potential of AI is laugh out loud funny.
A quick look at the best movies and TV streaming this week.
Review: Is James Cameron's latest tale from Pandora a big splash or a kerplunk?
Feuding cast members, a constantly evolving script and prickly geopolitics.
Jingle your bells and put up your trees. Here are 10 festive films that you need to see.
New York Times: The Menu explores the potential terrors of feeding the 1 per cent.
Richard Curtis's film has fat-shaming, dubious sexual politics and clunky 9/11 references.
Timothee Chalamet stars in this unconventional romance movie.
A biopic about the two reporters who took down Harvey Weinstein is powerful viewing.
Black Panther returns, without its late star.
A maddening, unforgettable cinematic journey into the mind of a particularly awful person.
This Trojan horse of a film slips a gay romance past the walls of romcom conventions.
Our shot-put hero takes us behind the scenes of her comeback and her life.
Was the 2015 movie the beginning of the end?