The massively popular video-game series gets a spooky adaptation that will please fans but bore casual audiences.
From the Duquesne Incline to the Children's Museum of Pittsburgh, here's are some of of favorite activities that kids (and parents) will enjoy.
This shocking horror film may be too much for many viewers, but genre fans will be morbidly pleased.
Martin Scorsese’s true-crime epic is rich in craft — and excess.
Amazon’s courtroom drama is lifted to victory by a game cast.
Taylor Swift’s hotly anticipated concert film is expected to break box-office records.
Belt Publishing and Belt Magazine are celebrating 10 years of telling the stories of the Rust Belt.
Reviews of two books that take a deep dive into the world of Pittsburgh sports.
Save the dates for concerts, art exhibits, dance performances & more.
Looking for a spooky activity this October? Check out these haunted houses and ghost tours in Pittsburgh.
The city’s largest movie screen will revive a seasonally appropriate favorite each Saturday for nearly three months.
The 10th chapter in the ultra-violent franchise changes the formula slightly, with compelling — if grisly — results.
A new science-fiction epic from the director of “Rogue One” borrows quite a bit from “Blade Runner” — and that might be its saving grace.
In our Retro Review series, we ask our editorial intern Emma Malinak to watch made-in-Pittsburgh flicks from the 20th century — long before she was even born.
The fourth installment of the throwback action franchise lacks star power, but delivers enough mindless action to get by.
You can see their eco-inspired work through January at Contemporary Craft.
PM Book Editor Kristofer Collins reviews two archives by native Pittsburgh writers.
Save the dates for concerts, art exhibits, dance performances & more.
The Carnegie Science Center exhibit, which will return in the spring, brings the submarine's history alive with war artifacts and Pittsburgh-themed clues.
In Netflix’s surprisingly layered dark comedy, the dictator Augusto Pinochet is a 250-year-old vampire. PM Film Critic Sean Collier says it’s unusual, but worth a watch.
The third of Kenneth Branagh's Hercule Poirot mysteries is a pleasant, fast-moving chiller.
The original “Nun” was only marginally successful, and the sequel is little more than a watered-down second serving.
The true story of gamers turned racecar drivers overcomes a hackneyed script with slick direction and sports-movie appeal.
In our Retro Review series, we ask our editorial intern Emma Malinak to watch made-in-Pittsburgh flicks from the 20th century — long before she was even born.