Forbidden Fruits, the new horror comedy starring Lili Reinhart, Lola Tung, Alexandra Shipp, and Victoria Pedretti, is something of a 2000s fever dream. Set in a Dallas shopping mall, our four leads ...
Rust Belt Theater Company presents “Forbidden Youngstown” on Friday and Saturday at Youngstown Playhouse. It’s one of two productions it will stage there for the remainder of 2025. Rust Belt, a ...
Indie film distributor Well Go USA Entertainment has acquired North American rights to Italian director Gabriele Mainetti’s Rome-set martial arts movie “The Forbidden City” following its international ...
'They Call Me Jeeg Robot' director Gabriele Mainetti imports a fierce Chinese fighter to an ethnically mixed Roman neighborhood, launching stuntwoman Yaxi Liu as a potential action star. A decade or ...
Thrash metal heroes Forbidden are back with their first piece of new music in 15 years. The last album we had from Forbidden was in 2010. Which is crazy to think was almost two decades ago. What a way ...
EXCLUSIVE: IFC Films and AMC Networks’ horror streamer Shudder have acquired the U.S. and Canadian rights to Meredith Alloway’s feature debut Forbidden Fruits, co-written by Alloway and Lily Houghton.
Every federal agency in the U.S. is currently trying to figure out how to purge forbidden words from documents posted online, in a desperate attempt to comply with President Donald Trump’s executive ...
Marc Santos is a Guides Staff Writer from the Philippines with a BA in Communication Arts and over six years of experience in writing gaming news and guides. He plays just about everything, from ...
Writer Brian K. Vaughan treads on hallowed ground for this 'revisionist' resurrection of a classic. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it ...
EXCLUSIVE: Warner Bros has made a deal to mount a new version of the 1956 science fiction classic Forbidden Planet. The film will be written by comic book and screenwriter Brian K. Vaughan, and it ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by From its perch way Off Broadway, the long-running satire slings its affectionate arrows at Patti, Audra and the rest. By Jesse Green At its best, ...